Het lezersblog is een groepsblog van inspirerende, gepassioneerde mensen uit verschillende landen en verschillende beroepsgroepen. Iedereen wordt van harte uitgenodigd zijn of haar standpunt of mening te geven over de zaken die hem/haar het meest ter harte gaan door te reageren op een blog. De dialoog kan beginnen!
I had a great experience yesterday. I went to a one day retreat where we did mostly tantric yoga exercises. Your thought; “that’s sex, right?” My thought; “More like sex between your and the others soul”. It’s about celebrating life and learning to open up to and love people just because they are people. You don’t need to really know them, don’t even need to know their names and you can still feel a strong love and openness for them (when you do tantric exercises together).
The exercises that we did can seem weird at first. But don’t worry; you don’t take of your clothes and there’s no nipple biting (as far as I have seen). The big advantage of this weirdness is that you are more or less forced to look at your thoughts and feelings when you are in a vulnerable situation, so close to a person you don’t know. You get all kinds of negative ideas about the other person, yourself and the situation, even if one of your usual values is respecting (and loving) all people you can see all the prejudices you’re still stuck with and live with in daily life. It took me a few hours to let go of those thoughts. Thank god we started at 10 in the morning and ended at 3 that night, I had plenty of time to realize and change important things. Read more...
Once again, I am inspired to write. I do so to introduce you to a young man who is both extraordinary and ordinary. Before I share his story, I want you to know some of my own philosophy and observations of what I call the realized expressions of life. One is born with the ability to seize and manipulate the experiences of ones realities and create expressions and outcomes that are a lot more than just mundane. Seizing opportunities, perhaps with or perhaps without fear, yet seizing opportunities that others do not notice or are not inspired by.
A case in point is the young man I am writing about, Roni, born in Northern India in a home/sanctuary created for those whose parents and grand parents were affected with leprosy. Read more...
By the time Katie posts this, I will be just days shy of fifty years of age. Like many of you, I’m sure, people have always asked me the standard birthday question: Do you feel different now that you’re X? I’ve been feeling different about this birthday for a long while.
Half a century. My paternal grandmother is thriving at the one century mark as I write this. She makes me wonder what I want my next fifty years to be about. I’ve been dreaming about it, daydreaming about it, brainstorming about it, wondering about it. Read more...
If so, do look at this MSC in Responsibility and Business Practice at the University of Bath, UK.
This course addresses the challenges currently facing society as we seek to integrate successful business practice with a concern for social, environmental and ethical issues. It looks at the complex relationship between business decisions and their impact on local and world communities and economies, on the environment and on the workplace itself. Participants will develop management practices which are responsive to pressures for greater awareness in these areas. The course offers a wide range of alternative perspectives on business, all of which challenge ideas about where "responsibility" begins and ends. Participants will learn about management techniques and approaches being developed in leading-edge organizations, and will test the relevance of these ideas and practices in their own workplaces. Read more...
Journalists this week didn’t even know whether to call the country Myanmar or Burma. Tens of thousands of citizens and monks rose up at last in response to the SLORC, the State Law and Order Restoration Council, the military regime that has been in charge of that country for decades, to demand the establishment of the democracy they voted for. Read more...
I went to a university in a state that was populated by mostly Italian Americans and Jewish Americans. I myself come from a WASP background, so was delighted to be immersed in the abundance of life surrounding me in those college years. Of course, I made many friends, of both persuasions, and loved every second of our times together. Read more...
Is anybody else dismayed at the United States Senate and their voted censure of MoveOn.org’s ad about General David Petraeus and how the White House used him to foment a political (not military) strategy? Followed quickly by yet another fruitless vote to end the war in Iraq? Read more...
Japanese are known to be workaholics, but they also know how to maintain a balance in life. One way is by an abundance of national holidays. In fact, there is at least one every month. These special days allow for honoring something of value, and also for much needed rest. In September every year there is
There is no greater disaster
Than enemy-making
For then you lose your treasure,
your peace.
Tao Te Ching, 69
The Tao Te Ching fascinates me. I have four translations of it in my library. Each of them takes today’s text into a different place. One mentions peace by name—the anonymous translation above. The others focus on enemy-making. Read more...
Four months back, I created my own job description and called myself an “Initiator & Facilitator of Change Networks”. I left Amsterdam 3 months ago to start practicing and earning money in that role. Read more...

