Posts Tagged ‘non-judgment’
» posted on Monday, October 19th, 2009 at 11:18 pm by JonathanDavidSabin
“You can Argue with Facts but you can’t Argue with Feelings” Carla Neff Gordan
Carla Neff Gordan was the most gifted intuitive that I ever met. She was the real thing. We met in the Middle 1980’s and over time became very close. She spent many days at our home giving workshops and working with clients. Carla was very fond of saying: “You can Argue with Facts but you can’t Argue with Feelings.” To quote her site Walk in Love, “Many philosophies recognize the presence of an angel, guardian angel or guides. Far fewer recognize, as the Guides taught through Carla, that every person has a guide – someone who loves and inspires them on their journey while they are in earth. These Guides are highly evolved spiritual beings who have graduated from the earth plane and therefore are truly able to be in a mentoring or guiding role with those who are still in the midst of their earth journey.”
post a comment | filed under Non-Judgement · Unconditional Love | tags: Angels, Carla Neff Gordan, Love, non-judgment, Personal Responsibility
» posted on Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009 at 12:15 pm by JonathanDavidSabin
“Its Better to Be For Something than against Something” HH the 14th Dalai Lama
Tom Robbins author of Even Cowgirls Get the Blues and many other books, said that there are really only two mantras on the planet: Yum + Yuck! The Indian Saint Ammachi has also stated that there are really only two emotions on the planet: Love and Fear. I find that I am in either Unconditional Love or I am in judgement. I prefer to to stay in unconditional love. It fosters hope, peace, equanimity and non-judgment. In an era when we see some much contrast, polarization and intolerance wouldn’t it be better for all of us to be for something rather than against? You can be against war, but wouldn’t it be more practical to be for Peace. Mother Theresa would never attend an anti-war rally, but she would attend peace rallies. Being for something is like putting your canoe in the river and flowing towards that which it naturally seeks as opposed to swimming upstream…its exhausting. If we would look for commonality between everyone we meet, we will always find it. If we are looking for difference we will always find that too. In fostering a preference of commonality and respect we can more quickly get to win-win. Everyone on the planet has a different moral, ethical, spiritual compass. We can co-exist if we are for something rather than against.
post a comment | filed under Tolerance · Unconditional Love | tags: Amma, Ammachi, Dalai Lama, intolerance, non-judgment, Tom Robbins


