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kundalini and surrender/Jill

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In a message dated 5/4/00 8:19:51 AM Pacific Daylight Time,

eggers writes:

 

<<

Perfectly safe is relative. In the relative world, kundalini is not

perfectly safe, but replete with danger. Total surrender to grace is

necessary when k makes herself known--the fall into grace for many is

difficult and painful and long: sometimes feeling of bliss and ecstasy,

sometimes hell. We do those (on this list and elsewhere) who are

longingly, devotedly, and trustingly walking the knife's edge of kundalini,

by her own design, an injustice when we suggest that the arduous nature of

their experience is due to lack of trust, or surrender, or unacknowledged

selfishness.

 

Jill >>

 

This post was awfully well stated -- another one l'm afraid l hadn't read

before sending mine in -- and spoken from Jill's profound personal

experience with kundalini. Reading this reminds me that there are times when

l'm better served by having others speak my thoughts. Very moving, Jill.

Thank you.

 

love,

jerry

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GCWein1111 wrote:

> This post was awfully well stated -- another one l'm afraid l

> hadn't read

> before sending mine in -- and spoken from Jill's profound personal

> experience with kundalini. Reading this reminds me that there are

> times when

> l'm better served by having others speak my thoughts. Very moving,

> Jill.

> Thank you.

>

> love,

> jerry

 

Mmmm... Isn't it great? I notice that when I have posted and someone

comes along making me feel "Oh wait, THAT's what I want to say" it's a

wonderful opportunity to examine my ideas. If I hold back and wait for

the sage to say the right thing, I can make pretend that that was what I

would have said had I said something. I say don't wait for the sage;

become the sage by experimenting with what you think you know. (I say

this to all, including myself) This is the fun of the list, I can stick

stuff out there and see how it fares. Sometimes I get pats on the back

and agree with them and decide to keep that one. Sometimes I get pats

on the back, but I feel uneasy about it, and try to look more closely at

it. Sometimes I get shot down and I know that the shooter has poor

aim. (Sometimes I'm right and the list is wrong.) Fun, I said that one

twice, suggesting that i need to hear it twice... Much more often, I

receive a different view that expands the way I see things. I like that

one, so thank you all for providing it.

 

LOve, Mark

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Guest guest

> This post was awfully well stated -- another one l'm afraid l hadn't

read

>before sending mine in -- and spoken from Jill's profound personal

>experience with kundalini. Reading this reminds me that there are times when

>l'm better served by having others speak my thoughts. Very moving, Jill.

>Thank you.

>

>love,

>jerry

>

 

Hi Jerry,

 

As usual you are so generous. Thanks for your post.

 

Jill

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