Vesna

3.8K posts

Vesna

Vesna

@kratko8

AZ Katılım Nisan 2011
374 Takip Edilen274 Takipçiler
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Petrus Romanus
Petrus Romanus@Roccah101·
Inspired by MJ... "They Don´t Care"
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Vesna@kratko8·
@QuantumTumbler Yes, responsibility sits on top, especially ethnical boundaries and unexpected outcomes. And more we can shape life, the more we have to decide - what should we shape—and what should we not.
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B@QuantumTumbler·
@kratko8 All three but responsibility sits on top. It’s progress in what we can do, power in what we’re capable of… but responsibility in how we choose to use it. We’re moving from reading the rules to writing them. That’s exciting, but it also means mistakes scale a lot faster too.
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B@QuantumTumbler·
What’s the most mind-blowing concept in science you’ve come across recently? No explanations needed just drop the topic 👇
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Vesna@kratko8·
@QuantumTumbler Yes agree that is the big shift. What do you think- does this shift feel to you more like progress, more like power or more now responsibility to you?
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B@QuantumTumbler·
@kratko8 Yeah… we’re crossing from understanding life to actively shaping it. That’s a big shift.
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Vesna@kratko8·
@QuantumTumbler I think thoughts often come as explanations for actions, decisions, and events that have already happened. We don't create life so much by thinking as our minds subsequently tell stories to give it meaning.
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B@QuantumTumbler·
Are your thoughts creating your life… or just explaining it after it happens?
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Vesna@kratko8·
@QuantumTumbler We are not any more just observers of the life, we are starting to shape it.
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B@QuantumTumbler·
@kratko8 That’s wild going from reading life’s code to writing it.
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The Core
The Core@TheCore1724808·
Beliefs about music’s power to heal the mind, body, and spirit date back to the Upper Paleolithic era, around 20,000 years ago, when ancient shamans and other healers used drumming in the hopes of curing a wide range of maladies, from mental disorders to wounds and illnesses. Our word shaman comes from the Russian shaman, for person of special status within a tribe who acts as an intermediary between the natural and the supernatural worlds, to foretell the future, cure illnesses, and control spiritual forces. The term was originally applied to the Tungusic peoples of northeast Asia. (It is often broadly applied to any ancient or modern person who “travels” in non-ordinary reality to gain information and possibly to heal spiritual, mental, or physical ills, such as the Inuit angakok, the Mentawai sikerei, the Korean mu, the Azande bomu nga, and the !Kung n/um k’ausi.) The shaman, medicine man or medicine woman, medium, or psychic who is entrusted with healing powers is a cultural universal, recurring across human societies and nearly every hunter-gatherer tribe. The shamanistic tradition was begun by women, and contrary to popular misconception, it was far from a men-only profession. Shamanism is just one historic antecedent of twenty-first-century music therapy. During the 11th century BCE, near the end of his life, King Saul suffered from periodic depression and agitation. On such occasions, we’re told, he would summon David, the same David who battled Goliath, and who was reputed to be among the greatest musicians in the kingdom. David would take the lyre and play it; Saul would find relief and feel better, and the evil spirit would leave him. (1 Samuel 16:23 NIV) David could slay a giant with a rock, and depression with a lyre. The origins of music for healing are as old as our species and are still practiced by a majority of peoples in the world today; music’s ability to heal, to provide a brighter day, to promote physical and mental health, knows no boundaries of language or culture. As Longfellow famously penned: Music is the universal language of mankind. Centuries earlier, a continent away, Confucius wrote: Music produces a kind of pleasure which human nature cannot do without.
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Vesna@kratko8·
@QuantumTumbler When you do something right, it feels and look effortless, like you did not even have to try that hard. But when you do it wrong, pushing yourself harder you feel immediately something is wrong. You can try other ways but at the end of the day you end up always with what works.
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B@QuantumTumbler·
Ever notice how doing something “right” feels effortless? There’s a reason for that and it’s not what most people think. buymeacoffee.com/omnilens/sitti…
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