willpower Three - Visualise what you really want

Posted on Monday, March 08, 2010 0 comments so far

 

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Talk to Sean

Posted on Wednesday, October 07, 2009 0 comments so far



Talk to Sean

What you waiting for? 

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Level six: Intuition

Posted on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 0 comments so far

  

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What a waste

Posted on Friday, September 11, 2009 1 comments so far
 

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Sean Orford's total detox

Posted on Wednesday, September 09, 2009 0 comments so far



Love and money and self-esteem

So have you got your head around the detox?  Several people have contacted me because they have an aim for their programme.  Some are starting off with weight loss and others changing habits and dealing with addictions.  I know that for everyone that has a go, it will be of benefit, subject to my health warning. 

 

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Sight beyond seeing

Posted on Friday, August 28, 2009 0 comments so far

 
 

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Sunshine month takes me away

Posted on Monday, August 17, 2009 0 comments so far



Sunshine month takes me away

We’re all going on a summer holiday
As I write this blog, the lads are loading the car, checking the oil and water in the engine. All I have to do now is to finish this, press send and then, as is my habit, check that the water bottles are full, back the car out of the drive and head for the horizon and the rising Sun. I love that feeling, the freedom of the open road and the wonder of not knowing what is around the next bend. I have Canned Heat playing in my head ‘...I’m on the road again’; it brings back so many good memories.

The dawn is such a magical time in all senses of the word. We use the image of the dawn to describe newness, breakthroughs, and new horizons: the dawn of the technical age, the dawn of the industrial society, the dawn of understanding. I see clients every day who experience that sense of coming into the light when, perhaps, for the first time in their lives, they can see things with a hitherto unknown clarity, as the truth dawns on them for the first time.

The person who is awake is always learning
In Ayurveda, my original training, it is acknowledged that the purpose of life is about learning, and that our body’s senses, mind and emotions are all designed to enable this to happen. Learning is a life-long process, though people may stop learning and growing at any age. Some people will cease development while in their childhood and may exhibit the emotional maturity of a seven-year old when they are seventy. However, the reverse may also be true, so that a seven-year old may possess the wisdom of a seventy-year old.

What is dawning on you?
If you are a growing, waking person, and I guess you are or you would not be reading this, there will be dreams, challenges and developments going on in your life that will represent new dawnings of understanding for you. I think about this a lot and review where I am up to. I use the contemplation part of my meditation sessions to do this, so dawnings are...

Time waits for no man
I often heard this one, but it is dawning on me that time passes quickly and it is easy to procrastinate; there are things that I want to do before I turn up my toes. I was reading something by Jack Canfield that suggested writing down the one hundred things you would like to do before you die. That got me thinking, so I have set myself some goals.

Things to be done

My top five are...
 
1) To develop my life and my relationships in such a way that they benefit not only me, but all those that I interact with, especially with my Rie.
 
2) To develop the courses so that I have at least one thousand people a year doing the Ten Steps Program
 
3) To get all the books written that I have in my head
 
4) To record more music albums and maybe do some performing
 
5) To create a purpose-built environmentally-friendly building that is used as a centre of learning, therapy and respite for those on the path of self-development
 
It dawned on me many years ago that the only way to achieve these things is to be focussed on the task and to be consistent and persistent in all that I do to achieve my aims.

What are your five?

You may be able to go for the hundred, though five is a good start. What are the things that it is dawning on you that need to be done? It is time to get them done. Try not to put off till tomorrow what you need to get done today.

Hey ho and away I go
But task number one is to go and enjoy my holiday. Tomorrow, I will wake in Lille France and then heading down through Belgium, Luxemburg and Switzerland to stay in Basil. Then the Italian lakes for a while and then back up through Mont Blanc and Dijon. Watch the site and I’ll keep you posted on progress and try and use this wonderful technology to post some pics on the site.

So pop by Wednesday and have a wonderful week.

Sean x

 

 

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In the month of light and Sunshine, there is something that you need to know...

Posted on Friday, August 14, 2009 0 comments so far



In the month of light and Sunshine, there is something that you need to know...

You are the light of the world
Albus Dumbledore famously created his deluminator that could take the light from a lamp into mini storage and then put it back at the flick of a button. And the Dementors were able to turn lightness into darkness and happiness into sadness. If you have ever experienced the vampiristic feelings of real evil, or extreme badness, you will begin to understand what J K R is getting at, but in her images it is the light of the Patronus, extreme goodness and happiness, that banishes all darkness.

Shine a light
Light always illuminates the darkness and the brighter the light, the greater the effect. The funny thing is that it is possible to shine a beam of light into darkness and turn darkness into lightness, but the same is not true the other way around. It is impossible to shine a beam of darkness and turn the light into darkness. Because of this, the image and concepts of darkness and light have been used again and again to explain religious and philosophical ideas for thousands of years. Light will always overcome the dark, goodness will always overcome badness and love will always overcome hate.

Good always wins in the end
It is the embodiment of the fact that you cannot shine darkness into lightness that creates the metaphor that the light will always win, or that goodness will always win over badness, in the end. This concept is hard to take on in a human culture that believes that force should be met with force, badness with badness, violence with violence, and hatred with hatred. All these things are dark things; they do not represent the energy of the light.

Shining light into the darkness
There are a few people who have been able to do this magical thing in our society. Nelson Mandela did it when he was released from prison. He had the power to create heaven or hell and he chose heaven. Gandhi did it when he used love and non-violence to stand against the entire British Empire. Yet these are big acts and, in the matter of lightness, no act is too big or too small, no one greater than another. To show kindness to others that are needy is the same thing. We can all shine a little light into someone’s darkness and change their lives with the smallest of acts, every day of our lives.

Forgiveness is a beam of light
When we hold any negativity, we are inviting darkness into our thoughts and feelings. We know that without light, crops will not grow and we know that in darkness, the world turns into winter and all nature goes to sleep. The only thing that will change this is the coming of spring and the light of growing the new season. It is also true of us. When we hold hates and hurts, resentments and disgruntlements, we maintain an inner darkness that makes us as stuck and as stagnant as nature in the depth of winter. If we want to change, grow and develop, we will need a bit of light to promote our growth and that comes from forgiveness, letting go and adding a little love. Those that do not understand this have an abundance of darkness within them that they often share with others everyday at home and at work.

‘I am the light of the world’  - Let me tell you a story.
John, Naz and I arrived at the ashram and were greeted with courtesy and respect. We were refreshed and shown to a place where we might sleep. Having unpacked, we went to the well to draw some water to refill our bottles. John was pleased with himself because the water that we had carried from the river, three days earlier, had lasted, though only just, and he had been right that we would not find water on the way. Naz was put out that John was right. He would have been so happy had we arrived with plenty of water to spare. It was not that Naz was ungrateful; it was more that he just enjoyed a good argument. To him, it was a good game that he would play with anyone willing to take him on, but John always provided such a good target because he was easy to wind up so that he would react, and Naz knew it, though I am not so sure that John ever did or he would not have kept on taking the bait.

The question
During the last few miles of our journey, we had been discussing what consciousness might be and we had been referring to the things we had been told about light. John kept quoting that Jesus had proclaimed, ‘I am the light of the world’, and was therefore declaring that he was God. Naz was at odds with that saying, ‘No, Jesus said he was the son of God’, but, as I recalled it, Jesus had claimed to be the son of man. We decided between us that when we had a chance to meet with the master, we would ask him for some clarity so that if Jesus did say these things, what had he really meant by them.

The master
We saw the master several times over the next few days, mainly in Satsang sessions that offered us no opportunity to talk with him. Our chance came for us about a week later when the three of us were granted an audience with him to ask questions. The master sat on a raised dais flanked by saffron-robed devotees. Before him were three empty cushions on which we were indicated to sit. The master greeted us with Namaste and asked us our names and where we had come from and, eventually, what was it that we wished to know. John bowed and spoke in his firm, deep voice explaining our dilemma. The master, with a smile in his eye, slowly watched us each in turn as though he were trying to read our minds or perhaps our souls. If I am honest, it made me feel rather uncomfortable, as though at that moment I had no secrets and was, in all senses, naked. After a good few minutes, he spoke again.

The uniqueness of individuality
‘If a being of great wisdom uses the word ‘I’, he does not usually refer to himself as an individual or an ego. No, he uses this word to mean ‘one’, the unique ‘one’ that is all things. In your language, you use the word individual to mean ‘I’. The word individual means undivideable. That which is undivideable is that which can never be split or broken; it is all one. The undivideable is the source of all things and is the essence of God. If someone were to say, ‘I am the light of the world’, perhaps we should hear that ‘The One’ undivideable energy that is God, the source of all things, and is the light of the world.’
We thought about what he said and the silence lasted some time. ‘But master, what about the light. What does he mean by it?’ asked Naz.

Light and consciousness are the same
‘Light used this way means the conscious awareness of Self. When a man is pure and his energy, his prana, flows freely through his body, his light will shine and when his light shines most brightly, that it is truly the light of God, he has become enlightened, he is full of light. He has become the light.’

The master looked at me to hear my question. It felt that this was an opportunity not to be wasted, so I chose my question very carefully and I asked, ‘If someone is enlightened so that they have become the light, do they cease to exist as a person?’ The master smiled and came down from his dais and stood before me. ‘A good question brother Sean. Let me use these good people to draw you a picture.’

He then directed John to stand on the far side of the room. He then chose seven devotees to stand in a curve on the other side of the room. He then directed Naz to stand between them in the middle. Finally, he directed me to follow him and we stood together at the mid-point between Naz and John.

‘John, you are the Sun.’ John smiled. ‘Naz, you are the rain.’ Naz looked sad. ‘Our brothers and sister over there are the phenomenal world of experience.’ They all laughed and waved. I got the feeling that they had seen this routine before. I was enthralled. ‘You, Sean, are the observer, you are Arjuna on the battlefield and I, if you will permit me, will be your charioteer.’ I said that I would be honoured.

We cannot have an outer world without having an inner world, but one reflects the other
‘Now we know that the physical outer world is simply an expression of the inner spiritual world. So that by looking at one, we can see the other. Let us imagine that John, the Sun, shines his light on the world.’ John instinctively raised his arms as though they were sun beams. ‘When it rains...’ he pointed at Naz who was looking very much like a wet weekend. I could imagine the voice in his head saying, ‘but I wanted to be the Sun’. ‘... the pure white sunlight is split as it passes through the rain into the seven colours of the rainbow.’ The devotees all danced and waved and sang out aloud, being the rainbow.

To be in the world, we tend to turn away from the light
‘Sean, as the observer, what do you have to do to see the rainbow?’ I was not sure how to answer this. ‘I look at it,’ I said. ‘And to look at it, what do you not look at?’ Well, behind me was John. ‘The Sun,’ I said. ‘Exactly right,’ said the master. ‘This is a great lesson. To see the world of experience, to become involved in the world of matter, to be alive, we turn our back on the light. When we grow in spiritual understanding, we turn away from the world of things and turn back to the light; this is evolution.’ He turned me around so that I was facing John. ‘So what do you see now?’ ‘The Sun,’ I said. ‘And what can you not see?’ ‘The rainbow,’ I said. The master nodded and then got us all to sit down again. Then he spoke.

To see the light, we need to turn away from the world of possessions
‘The light of the world is pure consciousness. But to live in the world, we do naturally turn our back on the light as we become involved in the world of matter and attachment to things and people. It is only when we give up the need to own and possess the world that we are able to turn our back on attachment and turn towards the light and allow the light of consciousness to flow through us. When we turn fully to the light, we turn our back on the material world, and, in turning to the light, we become enlightened.’ He looked searchingly at each of us in turn. ‘This is your life task,’ he said. At that, our audience came to a close and we went out into the sunlight, bemused at what we had just heard and full of questions and ideas that remained, for the time at least, unanswered.

In my life, in the world and indeed in my mind, I have found much darkness. As I have learned and grown, I have become more able to shine light into darkness for both myself and for others, and even in organisations and businesses. The ability to live in the light, to be positive and happy, is a decision. Once the decision is taken, the path and the direction become obvious to each of us. The only decision that is important is the first one and that is, to take the first step and to get on the path; after that it all flows.

Food for thought!

Have a wild weekend.

By Monday, I will be on the road in France, but I will be blogging on the way so drop by Monday and I’ll see you then.
Take care.

Sean x

 

 

 

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Your chance to ask questions

Posted on Wednesday, August 12, 2009 0 comments so far


 

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You can’t have one without the other

Posted on Monday, August 10, 2009 0 comments so far

 

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