Category: Wisdom Rx Bits

A Cure for When You Feel Stupid

A cure for when you feel stupid

Friends,

Stupid is a word with big teeth.

It is a word we each learned from someone who misunderstood the wondrous value of not knowing.
It is a word designed to take a piece out of the soulful confidence, the soulful knowing that we are.
It is a word designed to shackle and limit the voice of truth in your heart.

Relief For the Habit of Fear

Relief for the habit of Fear

A Blessing from our Baja California Mexico Adventure

Relief for the Habit of Fear

Beloveds,

It is time to remember a beginning within you that you have forgotten.
In truth, you are not made of fear.
Fear comes into being when you come to believe you are alone, isolated.

Know that at times fear saves your life.
But when danger is not present and fear persists love becomes lost.

Serendipity and Desire

Serendipity and Desire

Meet Squinty the Magic Cat, The Newest Member of Wisdom Rx.

Sometimes desires take time to mature. We’ve been thinking about having a cat for several years.  Serendipity and desire brought us a cat who’s a lot of fun. Our friend Bill upon leaving our house around midnight one evening heard a cat meowing in the bushes. Twenty minutes later after digging the cat out from the thicket our door bell rings and Bill is standing there holding Squinty and hands him over to David.

He’s called Squinty because his left eye squints a bit.  We’ve learned, by reading on the internet that when cat’s blink at you it is a sign of love. Squinty is a love magnifier, smart, quirky and playful. He loves to sit on David’s shoulder during sessions.

And he’s magical because he can change the most ordinary moment into one of surprise and delight. Instead of working at getting what we wanted, we let go and trusted. Serendipity and desire brought us an added love magnifier who is ready to work.

Bridging Worlds

Bridging Worlds

Bridging Worlds

Nineteen years ago, our friend David Z. was on vacation in southern Colorado  with his buddy who he describes as a gray haired, Jewish, neuro-psychologist from Brooklyn. They stayed in a log cabin motel with a bar.

That night, the jukebox stopped playing and his friend asked if he could play the piano and sat down and played boogie-woogie. After one song, the place went wild. As David Z. describes, a Harley rider, with a slicked back pony tail, old fashioned tattoos, wearing an unfashionably tight t-shirt, went outside returning with a whole set of harmonicas and joined in. For David Z. these two guys couldn’t have been more different.

Remembering Our Real Roots

Remembering our real roots

“The remembrance of love and of yourself as a loved one goes back to the memory of your soul’s creation.  It’s part of your DNA. It’s part of what you come into existence with.”

This quote from The Book of Love and Creation by Paul Selig is like holy water to us. Roots are quiet and the foundation of all that grows. We have roots just like a tree. They provide grounding and nourishment to our lives.

This tree is a great example of “as Above, so Below’.  The canopy of leaves is about the same size as the roots below.

We, like this tree, are rooted in Love. Remembering our real roots is easy to forget or disconnect from. We tend to think we’re in charge of love and thankfully we’re not. Love waters our roots. It’s the nutrient we long for.

Even when we think we’re unlovable, no matter how

ADD Attention Differently Designed

What if Attention Deficit Disorder was redefined as ADD- Attention Differently Designed?

My Attention was always Differently Designed (ADD). I’m so thankful.

I am a wildly dyslexic gleefully happy man. Were it not for my rather astounding level of dyslexic perception, I would not be the Medical Intuitive that I am nor would I have had the visual skills to be the successful photographer and filmmaker that I have been.

My own unique form of perception is a gift I learn from everyday.

Thank God I was just called weird or stupid and wasn’t drugged like so many millions are today. My attention as a child by contemporary measures moved around a lot.  I was always drawn to the spaces between things and people.