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Apr 28, 2008

 

Everyday I receive interesting articles from my friends all over the world. This issue of Cashes Weekly is dedicated to enhance your mind by giving you food for thought that will change your way of thinking. As I told you last week this week would be different and special. These thoughts come from people like you from all walks of life. Enjoy this edition and remember knowledge is power...

There is a field of energy that connects everything in our world—and scientists believe beyond. We are born with the ability to communicate with this field.
Through our heart-based intelligence, we speak the nonverbal language that this field recognizes. It’s from that language that everything from the healing of our bodies to peace between nations, personal relationships, personal abundance, the success of our careers are all linked through this field.

What is new is that within the last few years of the 20th century, Western science was able to validate the fact. It is now a fact. It’s no longer a theory. It’s no longer a metaphor. It is a fact that there is a universal field of what is called “non-conventional energy” that underlies everything that we see in our physical world. It is this invisible field that modern science is struggling to come to terms with. What does it mean in terms of our role in the universe? How do we connect and communicate with this field?
This is precisely where we are going. Science is a relatively new language that describes our world. Science or the scientific method are believed to have begun about 300 years ago when Isaac Newton formalized the laws of physics. So science is about a 300-year old study of the universe and the world around us. Many of the spiritual and indigenous traditions that we are studying have been here 4, 5, 6, even 7-thousand years, as in the case of the Hindu Vedas. Science has only arrived at the place where those traditions begin. For 300 years, scientists have been arguing, and the controversy has been whether or not this field exists. They have just arrived at the place where there is a general agreement that the field is here. Now they are asking: what do we do with it, on the one hand. On the other hand, these ancient traditions began with this understanding.
The best scientists will openly admit that our science is incomplete. Our science is based largely upon two false assumptions: The first false assumption is that the space between physical things is empty. That scientists tell us about 96% of the universe is empty. Only about 4% contains what we would call physical matter, or “stuff.”

The second false assumption is that our inner experiences of thought, feeling, emotion, belief have no effect on the world beyond our bodies. Now we know that is absolutely false. The peer-reviewed research papers published in technical journals have documented the fact that we create fields of energy in our bodies, specifically in our hearts, through feeling and belief. Those fields directly influence the world around us.
This means that there is less controversy as to whether or not we affect the world. The question is, to what degree? In other words, scientists now acknowledge that when we observe our world, that we cannot simply look at what’s happening; that by observing it, we affect and we influence things that happen in the world.
In the laboratory, they are showing that the observers, when they are watching the experiments, they have beliefs and expectations. And those beliefs and expectations become part of what they are watching. They change the behavior of the “stuff” that our world is made of, the same stuff that our bodies are made of.
So the question becomes: How much power do we have? How much ability do we have to influence the healing of our bodies and the events of the physical world?
The answer is: we have got as much as we are willing to accept. This is what we are understanding from studying the ancient traditions in the monasteries in Tibet, Bolivia, and Peru. If we do nothing, we have relatively little power to influence the healing of our bodies, the success of our careers, or the abundance of our relationships.
If we choose to hone this language in our heart, we may assume a tremendous amount of power to influence. Not control. Not manipulate. Not to impose our will but to influence the world around us.
Certainly, life-affirming healings within the human body are very well documented from our ability to speak this language of the heart.

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By Danny Penman
Source:
Daily Mail


The progress of medical science in the past 30 years has been so rapid that yesterday's miracles are tomorrow's commonplace procedures.
So it has proved with heart transplants, which have become almost routine in hospitals around the world.
Yet every once in a while a story emerges which should cause us all to sit up and take note that there is nothing "routine" or "commonplace" about such complex operations.
The suggestion, highlighted again this week, that donor patients could not only be acquiring the organs but also the memories - or even the soul - of the donor is surely one such story.
This bizarre possibility was raised by the inexplicable case of Sonny Graham - a seemingly happily married 69-year-old man living in the U.S. state of Georgia. He shot himself without warning, having shown no previous signs of unhappiness, let alone depression.
His friends described it as an act of passion, not of reason.
The case might have remained just an isolated tragedy were it not for the fact that Sonny had received a transplanted heart from a man who had also shot himself - in identical circumstances.
To make things even more intriguing, shortly after receiving the heart transplant, Sonny tracked down the wife of the donor - and fell instantly in love with her.
"When I first met her," Sonny told a local newspaper, "I just stared. I felt like I had known her for years. I couldn't keep my eyes off her."
He spoke of a deep and profound love for her. It was instant and it was passionate. The kind of love where overwhelming passion seizes control of the mind and banishes reason. They quickly wed.
The tragedy of Sonny Graham will, no doubt, be written off as mere coincidence. After all, there is surely no conceivable way that the memories, let alone the character of a donor, can be transplanted along with their heart.
Virtually every doctor and scientist will tell you the heart is a mere pump. The seat of our mind, our consciousness, our very soul - if such a thing exists - lies in the brain.
The heart's only control over our mind is whether or not it sends it blood. Ever since William Harvey unravelled the mysteries of the heart and circulatory system centuries ago, this fact has remained beyond doubt.
Well, almost beyond doubt.
For a few brave scientists have started claiming that our memories and characters are encoded not just in our brain, but throughout our entire body.
Consciousness, they claim, is created by every living cell in the body acting in concert.
They argue, in effect, that our hearts, livers and every single organ in the body stores our memories, drives our emotions and imbues us with our own individual characters. Our whole body, they believe, is the seat of the soul; not just the brain.
And if any of these organs should be transplanted into another person, parts of these memories - perhaps even elements of the soul - might also be transferred.
Bizarre Cases of Memory Transplants
There are now more than 70 documented cases similar to Sonny's, where transplant patients have taken on some of the personality traits of the organ donors.
Professor Gary Schwartz and his co-workers at the University of Arizona have documented numerous seemingly inexplicable experiences similar to Sonny's. And every single one is a direct challenge to the medical status quo.
In one celebrated case uncovered by Professor Schwartz's team, an 18-year-old boy who wrote poetry, played music and composed songs was killed in a car crash. A year after he died, his parents came across a tape of a song he had written, entitled, Danny, My Heart Is Yours.
In his haunting lyrics, the boy sang about how he felt destined to die and donate his heart. After his death, his heart was transplanted into an 18-year-old girl - named Danielle.
When the boy's parents met Danielle, they played some of his music and she, despite never having heard the song before, knew the words and was able to complete the lyrics.
Professor Schwartz also investigated the case of a 29-year-old lesbian fast-food junkie who received the heart of a 19-year-old vegetarian woman described as "man crazy".
After the transplant, she told her friends that meat now made her sick, and that she no longer found women attractive. If fact, shortly after the transplant she married a man.
In one equally inexplicable case, a middle-aged man developed a new-found love for classical music after a heart transplant.
It transpired that the 17-year-old donor had loved classical music and played the violin. He had died in a drive-by shooting, clutching a violin to his chest.
Nor are the effects of organ transplants restricted to hearts. Kidneys also seem to carry some of the characteristics of their original owners.
Take the case of Lynda Gammons from Weston, Lincolnshire, who donated one of her kidneys to her husband Ian.
Since the operation, Ian believes he has taken on aspects of his wife's personality. He has developed a love of baking, shopping, vacuuming and gardening. Prior to the transplant, he loathed all forms of housework with a vengeance.
He has also adopted a dog - yet before his operation he was an avowed "cat man", unlike his wife who favoured dogs.
It's easy to dismiss such tales as hokum. But the Chinese authorities are certainly taking them seriously.
They have recently taken an interest in Professor Schwartz's ideas and have begun a programme to monitor transplant patients. (As many "donated" organs in China come from executed political prisoners, a cynic might suggest that the authorities are worried about an "epidemic" of political thought spreading via organ transplants.)
Science or Supernatural?
Many scientists will, of course, point out that tens of thousands of organ transplants have now been carried out worldwide, so you would expect to come across a few bizarre cases like Sonny Graham's.
It is also hardly surprising that after a major life-threatening operation such as a heart transplant, a patient may undergo a profound alteration to their character. Who could remain unchanged after staring death in the face?
The powerful drugs required as part of organ transplant procedures can also cause major changes in behaviour. Put all these together and it's no wonder that some patients leave hospital with a drastically different outlook on life.
What is most surprising about these cases, though, is not that some transplant patients emerge as different people after an operation, but that the changes are so specific.
"It's a targeted personality change," says Professor Schwartz. "If this is the result of drugs, or stress, or coincidence, none of those would predict the specific patterns of information that would match the donor."
If Professor Schwartz and his ilk are right, it would destroy one of the foundation stones of modern biology. But then again, modern biology has a guilty little secret: it has, as yet, no viable theory to explain how we store memories and how we produce consciousness.
In fact, scientists haven't even managed to define what exactly consciousness is, let alone managed to pin down where it comes from and where it is to be found within the body.
So maybe, just maybe, the poets, romantics and mystics throughout the ages were right: the heart really is the seat of our emotions and of our souls.
And if we can transplant hearts, then perhaps it's not so fanciful to suggest that some part of the spirit goes with them. Who knows - one day doctors may even be able to offer a "character transplant".

 

SPECIAL JUST FOR YOU

If you do nothing but apply the information shared in this article... every single area of your life will become MASSIVELY richer and more fulfilling!

 
The Great Challenge of Life: By Jim Rohn

Here's the great challenge of life - you can have more than you've got because you can become more than you are.
I have found that income seldom will exceed your own personal development. Once in a while income takes a lucky jump, but unless you grow out to where it is it will go back to where you are.
Somebody once said if you took all the money in the world and divided it among everyone equally, it would soon be back in the same pockets. However, you can have more because you can become more.
You see, here is how the other side of the coin reads - unless you change how you are, you will always have what you've got. The marketing plan won't do it. It's a good plan but it won't work without you. You've got to work it. It is the human effort that counts. If you could send a sales manual out to recruit - wouldn't that be lovely? The major thing that makes the difference is what YOU do.
In order to have more, you need to become more. The guy says "If I had a good job I would really pour it on, but I have this lousy job so I just goof off." If that is your philosophy you are destined to stay there. Some people say if I had a lot of money I would be really generous, but I don't have much so I'm not generous.
See, you've got to change that philosophy or you will never have "the lots of money". Unless YOU change, IT won't change. Amazingly, however, when we throw out our blame list and start becoming more ourselves - the difference is everything else will begin to change around us.
 
About the Author:
 
Jim Rohn is hailed as one of the most influential thinkers of our time and has helped motivate and train an entire generation of personal development trainers as well as hundreds of executives from America's top corporations. He is one of today's most sought-after success counselors and has addressed over 6,000 audiences and four million people over the past 40+ years. Jim Rohn is the author of over 30 best-selling audios, videos, and books and is the 1985 recipient of the National Speakers Association coveted CPAE Award. For more information on Jim Rohn, visit http://www.JimRohnRocks.com

That's my special I hope you learned something from what you read. Thank you for visiting Cashes weekly. Come back again next week for another mind enhansing edition.

Big Daddy Cash