Saturday, March 20, 2010

Following up on the previous post

A felllow psychic and quite insightful lady, Azzrian Visions shared this and I thought it was a good follow-up/add on to my previous blog entry.


Good Timber

For sun and sky and air and light,



That stood out in the open plain



And always got its' share of rain ....



Never became a forest king.



But lived and died a scrubby thing.





The man who never had to toil,



In facing challenge did recoil,



Who never had to win his share



Of sun and sky and light and air...



never became a manly man,



But lived and died as he began.





Good timber does not grow in ease.



The stronger wind, the stronger trees,



The farther sky the greater length,



The more the storm the more the strength.



By son and cold, by rain and snows,



In tree or man, good timber grows.





Where thickest Stands the forest growth



We find the patriarchs of both...



And they hold the converse with the stars



Whose broken branches show the scars



Of many winds and much of strife...



This is the common law of life.





Author unknown

Friday, March 19, 2010

Patience and the Art of Waiting

“All human wisdom is summed up in two words - wait and hope” Alexander Dumas
“Patience is the companion of wisdom.”Leo Tolstoy
“He that can have Patience, can have what he will”



It's a fact: we live in a fast food, on-demand, right here, right now, society.
This makes it difficult when there are times we have to wait, when the answers or solutions are not immediate. But we must remember our lives are not a McDonald's Drive-thru, our lives are, well, to state the obvious, our lives. I'm sure we've all heard as a child from an elder or our parents, "anything worth having is worth waiting for", well, there's a lot of truth to that adage. The best things in life are usually hardly obtained in an instant, they are obtained through hard work, patience, and non-passively waiting.

Monday, March 15, 2010

GORGED ON A FAST FOOD WORLD- Visiting a Psychic-NOT the magic pill for what ails you

There seems to be a broad and wide-spread misconception amongst many who visit a psychic(s). It's the same misconception that some who believe in prayer as the answer to their problems. This myth, which runs deep and is wide-spread, must be debunked.


Visiting a psychic (or even praying) is not a magic panacea for what ails you. Be it problems in love, relationships (all-family and love), finances, and/or career, simply visiting a psychic will not cure your problems. Psychics are not god, nor are they magic wand wavers.


We have (in developed nations) come to gorge ourselves on a "fast food lifestyle" and we want everything instantly, all with minimal to no work at all involved. And sadly, the world is turning out inventions that make this type of lifestyle easier and more obtainable every day.


When you visit a psychic, you should stand clear that the psychic is not going to and is not able to solve your problems. Simply speaking with one will not make your life magically better. A psychic reading can provide you with guidance, insight, a different perspective, and some compassionate guidance, even perhaps, some ideas or suggestions of solutions to your problem(s). BUT you must, absoltely must, put in the necessary efforts to get where you want to be. Yes, work on your part is required. A winning combination you can get from your psychic is to be prepared to work out a plan of action together and then actually follow through and do those things. But never expect to do nothing and never expect results to be quick, sometimes things take days, weeks, months, or even years to pan out.


~I do not know anyone who has gotten to the top without hard work. That is the recipe. It will not always get you to the top, but it will get you pretty near. ~ Margaret Thatcher


~I'm a great believer in luck and I find the harder I work, the more I have of it. ~ Thomas Jefferson


~ You'll never succeed in idealizing hard work. Before you can dig mother earth you've got to take off your ideal jacket. The harder a man works, at brute labor, the thinner becomes his idealism, the darker his mind. ~
D.H. Lawrence