mindpotion Blog
Thursday, 3 April 2014
IPCC's Report Deliberately Excludes Important Climate Science
Mood:  d'oh
Topic: Conspiracy / Corruption


By Joseph Bast

This week, the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is releasing its latest report, the “Working Group II Contribution to the Fifth Assessment Report.” Like its past reports, this one predicts apocalyptic consequences if mankind fails to give the UN the power to tax and regulate fossil fuels and subsidize and mandate the use of alternative fuels. But happily, an international group of scientists I have been privileged to work with has conducted an independent review of IPCC’s past and new reports, along with the climate science they deliberately exclude or misrepresent.

Our group, called the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC), was founded in 2003 by a distinguished atmospheric physicist, S. Fred Singer, and has produced five hefty reports to date, the latest being released today (March 31).

So how do the IPCC and NIPCC reports differ? The final draft of the IPCC’s Summary for Policymakers identifies eight “reasons for concern” which media reports say will remain the focus of the final report. The NIPCC reports address each point too, also summarizing their authors’ positions in Summaries for Policymakers. This provides a convenient way to compare and contrast the reports’ findings.

Here’s what the reports say:

IPCC: “Risk of death, injury, and disrupted livelihoods in low-lying coastal zones and small island developing states, due to sea-level rise, coastal flooding, and storm surges.”

NIPCC: “Flood frequency and severity in many areas of the world were higher historically during the Little Ice Age and other cool eras than during the twentieth century. Climate change ranks well below other contributors, such as dikes and levee construction, to increased flooding.”

IPCC: “Risk of food insecurity linked to warming, drought, and precipitation variability, particularly for poorer populations.”

NIPCC: “There is little or no risk of increasing food insecurity due to global warming or rising atmospheric CO2 levels. Farmers and others who depend on rural livelihoods for income are benefitting from rising agricultural productivity throughout the world, including in parts of Asia and Africa where the need for increased food supplies is most critical. Rising temperatures and atmospheric CO2 levels play a key role in the realization of such benefits.

IPCC: “Risk of severe harm for large urban populations due to inland flooding.”

NIPCC: “No changes in precipitation patterns, snow, monsoons, or river flows that might be considered harmful to human well-being or plants or wildlife have been observed that could be attributed to rising CO2 levels. What changes have been observed tend to be beneficial.”

IPCC: “Risk of loss of rural livelihoods and income due to insufficient access to drinking and irrigation water and reduced agricultural productivity, particularly for farmers and pastoralists with minimal capital in semi-arid regions.”

NIPCC: “Higher atmospheric CO2 concentrations benefit plant growth-promoting microorganisms that help land plants overcome drought conditions, a potentially negative aspect of future climate change. Continued atmospheric CO2 enrichment should prove to be a huge benefit to plants by directly enhancing their growth rates and water use efficiencies.”

IPCC: “Systemic risks due to extreme [weather] events leading to breakdown of infrastructure networks and critical services.”

NIPCC: “There is no support for the model-based projection that precipitation in a warming world becomes more variable and intense. In fact, some observational data suggest just the opposite, and provide support for the proposition that precipitation responds more to cyclical variations in solar activity.”

Read More - forbes.com


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Thursday, 3 April 2014 01:49 MEST
Wednesday, 2 April 2014
Improve your Brain with Music
Mood:  bright
Topic: Therapy


Most people have their own particular styles of music they enjoy. Music is one of the greatest joys of mankind and it is effective at simulating the brain and enhancing learning. Listening to music stimulates the whole brain through diverse neural circuitry that stimulate better brain metabolism. Listening to enjoyable music improves your brain function.

The brain is divided into two major hemispheres called the right and left hemispheres. The right brain is thought to process information through creative imagery. The left brain is the analytical side that controls verbal and mathematical processing. The corpus callosum connects the left and right hemispheres and controls the communication between these two.

Music helps connect your brain hemispheres

Music is unique in that it activates a broad array of neurons across the corpus callosum. This creates a state of harmony between the two hemispheres. The non-verbal melodies of music stimulate the right brain while singing stimulates the language center in the left hemisphere.

Music has the amazing potential to alter an individual's state of consciousness. Music therapy has been shown to shift a person's complete perception of time and stimulates unique emotions and memories. Listening to music boosts endorphin release which lifts our spirits and activates positive emotions and states of euphoria.

Music helps boost creative energies

Music also boosts creative energies through the production of alpha and theta waves. Large influxes of alpha waves induce states of enhanced creativity while theta waves are associated with dreaming, learning and relaxing.

The key for boosting creative energies is to listen to the type of music you enjoy the most. If you want more inspiration in language and mathematics it would make sense to listen to music with
singing while music without words stimulates more artistic and visual senses.

These types of music can also be used to help balance the hemispheres effectively. Someone who has a left brain focused job such as an accountant may experience an increased level of peace and stability when they listen to classical music or other right brain style music.

Someone with a heavy right brain position (such as an artist) may do well with rock-n-roll or other lyric based music to charge up their left brain. This is all subjective to the unique tendencies and subtleties of the individual but more research is pointing in the direction of using music to balance and stabilize the hemispheres.

Music therapy and your health

Classical or light music help to calm and relax blood pressure. Researchers have shown that listening to calming music for periods of time every day is extremely effective for stabilizing blood pressure levels.

Music therapy is used to help patients with neurological conditions by stimulating unique regions and enhancing blood flow and metabolism. This sort of therapy was popularized by Dr. Oliver Sacks and featured in the movie "Awakenings."

Music therapy and Alzheimer's disease

Alzheimer's disease is associated with damage to the temporal lobe that is used to process and direct memories. Music stimulates not only direct memories but other circumstances surrounding that musical experience. Researchers have found that listening to music can indirectly stimulate memory fragments that would not otherwise be retrieved. This helps to provide emotional comfort and improve brain function.

Music therapy and Parkinson's disease

Parkinson's disease is a pathogenic process that destroys the basal ganglia. This region of the brain organizes thoughts and movements into action. Strong, rhythmic musical beats stimulate motor control, movement and coordination. Combining this music with dance steps and other movements has been shown to improve walking speed and coordination for individuals with Parkinson's.

Learn more: naturalnews.com

About the author:

Dr. David Jockers owns and operates Exodus Health Center in Kennesaw, Ga. He is a Maximized Living doctor. His expertise is in weight loss, customized nutrition & exercise, & structural corrective chiropractic care. For more information go to www.drjockers.com


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Wednesday, 2 April 2014 01:38 MEST
Tuesday, 1 April 2014
Abundance Meditation
Mood:  bright
Topic: Meditation

This 30 minute abundance meditation will increase gratitude, love and success in your life. Be sure to practice daily for best results.

Studies have shown that it doesn't matter much 'how' you meditate, just as long as you do it regularly. Once you attain the power that comes from long training in sitting meditation, the following benefits will result:

 - Improved memory
 - Attachment to desires diminish
 - Patience and endurance grows
 - Rash and thoughtless behaviour diminishes
 - Suffering of illness decreases, and one's complexion brightens
 - Liberation from the cycle of birth and death

 


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Tuesday, 1 April 2014 01:59 MEST
Monday, 31 March 2014
The Reason Some People Always Focus On The Negative
Mood:  bright
Topic: Negativity


By Josh Richardson is blogger, healer, and a constant pursuer of the natural state of human consciousness.

If we look at the physical world, we find that negativity is present — ordered things have shown the tendency to become disordered sooner or later, however natural. The same applies to human behavior, however genetic. A new study by a University of British Columbia researcher finds that some people are genetically predisposed to see the world darkly.

It is interesting to see that the human mind which is considered to be the most ordered and conscious system in the world is not left untouched by the negative effects of the environment. Negativity is all-pervasive, it seems.

The study, published in Psychological Science, finds that a previously known gene variant can cause individuals to perceive emotional events–especially negative ones — more vividly than others.

The ability to regulate emotions is essential to both mental and physical well-being. Conversely, difficulties with emotion regulation have been postulated as a core mechanism underlying mood and anxiety disorders.

The ability to identify and distinguish between negative emotions helps us address the problem that led to those emotions in the first place. But while some people can tell the difference between feeling angry and guilty, others may not be able to separate the two. Distinguishing between anger and frustration is even harder. Emotions can also become problematic — for example, for people with depression who can’t stop thinking about negative thoughts.

“This is the first study to find that this genetic variation can significantly affect how people see and experience the world,” says Prof. Rebecca Todd of UBC’s Dept. of Psychology. “The findings suggest people experience emotional aspects of the world partly through gene-coloured glasses — and that biological variations at the genetic level can play a significant role in individual differences in perception.”

The gene in question is the ADRA2b deletion variant, which influences the hormone and neurotransmitter norepinephrine. Previously found to play a role in the formation of emotional memories, the new study shows that the ADRA2b deletion variant also plays a role in real-time perception.

The study’s 200 participants were shown positive, negative and neutral words in a rapid succession. Participants with the ADRA2b gene variant were more likely to perceive negative words than others, while both groups perceived positive words better than neutral words to an equal degree.

“These individuals may be more likely to pick out angry faces in a crowd of people,” says Todd. “Outdoors, they might notice potential hazards — places you could slip, loose rocks that might fall — instead of seeing the natural beauty.”

The findings shed new light on ways in which genetics — combined with other factors such as education, culture, and moods — can affect individual differences in emotional perception and human subjectivity, the researchers say.

Further research is planned to explore this phenomenon across ethnic groups. While more than half of Caucasians are believed to have the ADRA2b gene variant, statistics suggest it is significantly less prevalent in other ethnicities. For example, a recent study found that only 10 per cent of Rwandans had the ADRA2b gene variant.

Contagious?

The increased risk of depression that comes with negative thinking also seems to rub off.

In the study in Clinical Psychological Science, researchers looked at 103 pairs of college-freshmen roommates’ “cognitive vulnerability,” which is the tendency to think that negative events are a reflection of a person’s own deficiency or that they will lead to more negative events. Those with high cognitive vulnerability are at an increased risk of depression, studies have found.

“We found that participants’ level of cognitive vulnerability was significantly influenced by their roommates’ level of cognitive vulnerability, and vice versa,” the researchers wrote. All roommates in the study were selected randomly; students did not choose their roommates. Only three months of living together was needed for this contagiousness to be seen.

The researchers also found that those who experienced an increase in cognitive vulnerability during the first three months of college had nearly twice the level of depressive symptoms at six months, compared with those who did not experience an increase in cognitive vulnerability, according to the study. The effect was particularly strong when participants were under high-stress conditions.

Prior to this study, it was thought that cognitive vulnerability didn’t change much once a person passed early adolescence. However, the new findings suggest that during big transitions in life — when a person is continually exposed to a new social situation — cognitive vulnerability can be altered, the researchers said.

They noted that genetic, biological and environmental factors all likely play a role in a person’s level of cognitive vulnerability.

Further research is needed to determine whether cognitive vulnerability may change over time, the researchers said, noting that college freshmen are in a unique social environment.

“Our findings are consistent with a growing number of studies that have found that many psychological and biological factors previously thought to be set in stone by adulthood continue to be malleable,” the researchers said.

Source - http://wakingtimes.com


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Monday, 31 March 2014 02:12 MEST
Sunday, 30 March 2014
Beyond positive thinking - The harmony of thoughts, beliefs, inner feelings and actions
Mood:  bright
Topic: Hypnosis & Psychology


What role can positive thinking have on our reality?

More importantly, how do you feel about positive thinking?

If you feel that positive thinking has little influence on reality, if you believe that positive people are fake people, that positivity is all for dreamers who can't face reality, then you do not understand the power of thought, belief, feeling, and action working together to attract positive results.

Positive thinking will fail you if your desires are not clear and in harmony with your belief and action. You have a unique ability to attract both positivity and negativity. If you want a life of purpose and joy, you have to think beyond what is in front of you and truly believe in the invisible. New results are attainable, attractable, achievable.

When thoughts, beliefs feelings and actions come together in unity, your own reality can be manifested. A positive thought can attract similar positive energy when your feelings and actions align with it. What is holding you back in your spirit?

The importance of how you feel about the outcome

If you feel that the outcome is impossible, then it will always be just that - impossible. You set the limits. You can accept a new universe of faith and explore the infinite, if you let it happen. It's not what happens to you that determines your reality. It's what you do about it. You can change your world for the better.

The power of positive thinking is connected to how strongly you feel about the desired result. Passion can guide that feeling, taking a thought and creating a reality through dedicated belief and an unrelenting feeling of commitment to the goal. The power of positive thinking comes from more than just the bantering of positive words and phrases. Saying positive words is nice, but if you don't feel good intentions behind what you say, if you don't believe that the positive words will have an impact, then those positive musings may have little to no effect at all on your life. Turn words into positive affirmations.

Acting out in faith

Boldly acting in faith, always pressing forward with committed energy, will carve a new destiny, moving stubborn mountains.

Action must be taken to make a positive thought and a strong feeling react and move into existence. Actions must be backed by endurance, as you move forward despite opposition. Your dream may meet many different forces of negative, opposing energy. Continuous forward movement will push you through the struggles. Don't focus on the struggle. When something doesn't work out the way you planned, always believe that something better is about to be attracted.

Learning how to manipulate reality

Reality can be deceptive. In a way, you can manipulate your current circumstances and change your reality by giving thanks. Many times our thought patterns can attract the same life circumstances over and over again because we are constantly disgusted with the result. Instead, be thankful. In order to manipulate what we see and change it all for the better, we must learn to envision something completely different. To change the course, we must then feel strongly about the fruition, showing and thinking with no doubt. Finally, we must move in ways that correspond to the manifestation of that thought.

- Looking for a soul mate? Go out of your way to include them in your life and be thankful that they are there, even if they don't exist.

- Want to be a more generous man of wealth? It's time to stop thinking that you live paycheck to paycheck. Start giving more to the deserving in preparation for who you are to become.

- Want to be healthy? Start thinking, feeling and acting the way healthy people do. Hang out with them and do what they do.

About the author:

Inspired by powerful changes in he and his family's own health, Lance Johnson is excited about the future of nutrition, cellular detoxification, and organic products. As an avid, everyday learner and researcher, Lance believes real health opportunities exist outside of the mainstream medical industry. Passionate, he has begun creating an all natural products movement from the ground up at: www.allnaturalfreespirit.com

Learn more: naturalnews.com


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Sunday, 30 March 2014 02:17 MEST
Saturday, 29 March 2014
Tracking Solar Torrents
Mood:  chatty
Topic: Sun

In its fourth year in orbit, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory has brought us front row center to a show filled with radiant bursts and dark mysteries.

SDO captures images of the sun in 10 different wavelengths, highlighting a range of surface temperatures. These show specific structures.... such as solar flares -- giant explosions of light and x-rays -- and coronal loops -- streams of solar material that travel up and down looping magnetic field lines. These field lines can launch prominence eruptions, when masses of solar material blast off the surface of the sun, often falling back in vast torrents of fire.

Eruptions like these are often associated with dark cool regions called sunspots... below which tangled magnetic fields cause the energy to build to extremes.

One of the largest sunspot clusters in recent years appeared in January 2014. It was a prelude to a powerful X-class flare.

 


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Saturday, 29 March 2014 02:11 MEST
Friday, 28 March 2014
Nutrition is the basis for Happiness
Mood:  bright
Topic: Happiness


Happiness comes easy for some, but for many it's a daily struggle. Some carry the weight of the world on their shoulders, while others see beauty in all things. Unhappy people deal with internal strife, fears, early-life trauma, genetic predispositions, major injuries, losses, etc. Our set points for happiness differ, as do our circumstances. Yet, what we do about our circumstances makes all the difference. So does what we eat, because nutrition is the foundation of wellness.

Vitamin D

Happiness starts by getting some sun. Vitamin D is produced in the skin from sunlight, and available as a supplement. Upwards of 5,000 IU of vitamin D3 daily is optimal for bone and muscle strength, cancer prevention, cardiovascular function, autoimmune disease prevention, and infection resistance. It also enhances a sense of well-being, improves sleep, reduces inflammation, and relieves depression, which contribute to happiness.

Omega-3s

Equally important for happiness are omega-3 fatty acids, which support heart, brain, mood, joint, skin, immune, allergic, digestive, metabolic and vision health. Our eyes and brains contain high levels of DHA - the mature form of omega-3 - which improves nerve-cell growth and communication. Omega-3s reduce inflammation, a process that fuels depression, anxiety, cognitive dysfunction, heart disease and cancer. Low omega-3 is linked to cognitive dysfunction, while omega-3 supplementation benefits depression, anxiety, bipolarity, ADHD, and behavioral problems. Fish oil keeps prisoners from rioting, and makes for happy mothers and babies. Omega-3 deficiency is a risk factor in major psychiatric and personality disorders, despair, homicide and suicide. Omega-3s also protect against the dumbing-down caused by sugar. Arthritis relief is also worth a few smiles. Animal sources include fatty fish, grass-fed meat an dairy, and fish and krill oil supplements. Vegetarian sources include algae, flaxmeal, walnuts, hemp and chia seeds. Other healthy fats found in olive oil, avocados, nuts, seeds, and leafy green vegetables also decrease depression risk.

Antioxidants

Many fats are prone to oxidative damage (rancidity), which contributes to aging and chronic diseases. Omega-3s are protected by several antioxidants, including carotenoids, vitamin E, curcumin, CoQ10, olive oil and extracts, fruits, vegetables and green tea. Yellow carotenoids (lutein, zeaxanthin) protect omega-3s in the brain and eye to prevent dementia and blindness, which can lead to dependency, depression and unhappiness. Neural tissue is difficult to regenerate, and needs antioxidant protection.

Adults with higher antioxidant levels are more optimistic. Carotenoids from fruits, vegetables, or supplements are especially effective. High carotenoid intake is linked to numerous health benefits and longevity, based on a 62-study review. Sadly, most Americans fall into the moderate to high disease risk category, based on their low carotenoid consumption.

Serotonin

Raising serotonin improves mood. Serotonin is made from tryptophan. 5HTP (5-hydroxytryptophan) has been shown to raise serotonin levels. Vitamins B6 and B12 help maintain serotonin levels, and help reduce irritability, weakness, insomnia and calm nerves. Vitamin B6 increases omega-3s in cell membranes. SAMe (S-adenosylmethionine) also promotes mood-elevating neurotransmitters.

Other happy pills

Theanine from green tea is calming and promotes sleep. Phenylethylamine (PEA) is an antidepressant found in chocolate and blue-green algae. Magnesium calms muscles and nerves, improves mood, and fosters sleep. Fiber makes for happy gut bacteria, which return the favor by removing toxins from our bodies. Sweets and carbs are among the most comforting foods, despite some serious drawbacks. Nevertheless, a little raw honey daily is healthy, and will boost tryptophan in the brain to increase serotonin. The list goes on and on. Experiment a little with these mood-elevating foods and supplements. You'll be happy you did.

Learn more: naturalnews.com


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Friday, 28 March 2014 02:15 MEST
Thursday, 27 March 2014
Doubt cast on evidence for wet Moon
Mood:  happy
Topic: Moon


Scientists have cast doubt on a major part of the case for the Moon having once held abundant water.

A US team studied a mineral called apatite, which is found in a variety of lunar rock types.

Apatite, the name for which comes from a Greek word meaning deceit, may have misled scientists into thinking the Moon is wetter than it actually is.

Lead author Jeremy Boyce said: "We thought we had a great indicator, but it turns out it's not that reliable."

Initial analysis of the lunar rocks brought back to Earth by the Apollo missions suggested the Moon was "bone dry".

But in the last decade, studies of volcanic glasses and apatite in lunar rocks have revealed them to be hydrogen-rich, building a compelling case for significant water having been present on the Moon as different minerals crystallised from cooling magma.

Dr Boyce, a Nasa Early Career Fellow at the University of California, Los Angeles, presented his results at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC) in The Woodlands, Texas, this week. The work has also just been published in the prestigious journal Science.

The UCLA geochemist, along with collaborators Francis McCubbin, Steve Tomlinson, James Greenwood and Allan Treiman, simulated the formation of apatite minerals containing different amounts of volatile elements - hydrogen, chlorine and fluorine.

They demonstrated that it was possible to start with any water composition in the magma and, by varying only the degree of crystallisation and the chlorine content, reproduce all the features seen in a diverse range of apatite from the Moon.

Read More - BBC


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Thursday, 27 March 2014 02:13 MEST
Wednesday, 26 March 2014
London Bombings - 7/7 What Did They Know?
Mood:  loud
Topic: Conspiracy / Corruption

"7/7 What Did They Know?" is a new documentary from WideShut.co.uk, exploring the intelligence that was available to the police and security services prior to the July 7, 2005, London Bombings.

Officials claim they had no inkling of what was to befall London, but using newspaper reports, testimony and evidence from the inquest, the film reveals that Britain was warned continuously about threats to the Underground, actively planned to prevent them and had specific knowledge that two of the alleged bombers were involved in terrorist related activities.

More shocking is the evidence that during the 90s there was a semi-secret Government policy to allow extremists to operate in Britain and even send young men to terror training camps in Pakistan, when it suited Blair's foreign policy in the Balkans. Furthermore there's a possibility that extremists who surrounded the alleged bombers before the attacks had all at some point worked for British or allied intelligence agencies.

With the limited scope of the inquest, family members are still calling for an independent public inquiry to get to the bottom of this devastating tragedy.

For an extensive archive of 7/7 related information visit: http://julyseventh.co.uk

 


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Wednesday, 26 March 2014 02:19 MEST
Tuesday, 25 March 2014
Your Power is in the Now Moment
Mood:  bright
Topic: Self-Improvement


What is the thought you thinking right now? Is it an empowering thought? Is it a thought about the argument you had yesterday? Is it a thought about what you have to do tomorrow? Is it a thought about what you saw in the news? Whatever that thought is; you are using it to create your reality.

All time is a suggestion of the mind. In our world, we project it as a horizontal line in which there is a past, a present and a future. For many of us, we lock ourselves into internal and external conversations that either rehash the past or speak about a future filtered through our past memories. Through our dialogues, we tend attract to ourselves analogous circumstances and relationships over and over again. We change jobs only to be confronted with the same problem employees or bosses. We get out of one relationship and find ourselves engaged with the same type of person. At points we ask ourselves: Why am I experiencing this again? Why do I keep attracting the same thing over and over again?

You are experiencing it because you haven’t shifted your vibration. If you spend time listening to your internal and external dialogues, you will discover that you are unconsciously creating. You are using your imaginal abilities to create negatively. For the thoughts you are thinking in this moment do not recede into the past. They actually advance into the future to confront you.

If you are continually talking about the problem you had yesterday, you are projecting that onto the screen of your tomorrows. If you are talking negatively about what might happen, you are projecting that onto the screen of your life. It is through the thoughts you are saying or thinking at this particular moment that puts the whole thing in motion.

In the middle of your past and future, is the present moment. Most of us neglect this moment because we do not understand that it is our point of power. It is the bouncing off point. How you use it determines your next moment and the next moment and the next moment.

To move your awareness to the present moment, you have to release yourself from ‘what is’. You cannot continue to focus on what it is you don’t like and expect to change your life. It is your focusing that keeps you locked into a pattern. I can hear you now…but this is reality! If you don’t like your reality, then it is time to become a conscious creator. It’s time to realize that you are the operative power and that power rests with how you use your imaginal abilities in this present moment.

So where do you begin? You start playing with time and become aware of how you are using you present moment. Here are few exercises for you to experiment with to get you into the habit of becoming conscious of your moments.

1.  Do a mental roll call. Throughout the day, stop whatever you are doing and take attendance. Mentally call out your name and answer:  Present.

2.  Throughout the day, stop whatever you are doing and ask yourself: ‘what time is it?’ Answer: ‘The time is now and I am here.’

3.  Break out of your routine. Have dinner for breakfast. Drive to work a different way. Go for a walk at lunch time. Meditate on your coffee break. Go into the office earlier and leave earlier than you normally do. Wake up an hour earlier.

About the Author

Beverly Blanchard is a freelance writer, artist and personal coach. She spent most of her life studying ancient wisdom in search of answers to life. Beverly has studied energy work and how this affects the body. She is the author of Into the Waves. Please visit her blog at www.beverlyblanchard.blogspot.ca where this article was originally featured.


Posted by Neil Bartlett DHyp M.A.E.P.H at 00:01 MEST
Updated: Tuesday, 25 March 2014 02:04 MEST

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