Monthly Archive for January 2009
cambridge meditation center

Kings College Cambridge: Organ Recital 3) Marco Lo Muscio: “Ecstatic Meditation n.1″ (To Messiaen)
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Meditation $9.28 Meditation is not strange, weird, woo-woo, something you do once a year at a retreat center– and never before has a clear, practical, accessible, and affordable book made that so abundantly clear. Purser encourages you to do your own taste test: Meditate for 20 minutes daily for one month and compare your contentment, peace, and stress levels. Purser describes how meditation can relieve stress and anxiety, encourage deep relaxation, build confidence, enhance creativity, and release our true emotional and spiritual selves. The book is chock-full of helpful asides and lists: 20 reasons you might benefit from quieting your mind; mindful dressing exercise–you read that right–meditate as you do something you do every day. No time for meditation? Not true, says Purser–find it when you’re stuck in traffic or between tasks at work and dozens of other creative times, techniques, and tools for simple meditation. Transforms age-old principles into simple practices that people can use to improve their lives right away. Beautiful full-color illustrated package, an appealing present suitable for anyone. For about the price of an evening at the movies or a bottle of wine, find long-term peace and contentment. |
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Cambridge $14.66 Nestled among the foothills of eastern Ohio, historic Cambridge sits on a bluff overlooking the meandering Wills Creek. The National Road, the first federally funded interstate road, serves as its main street and has shaped its identity, character, and economy. The first legal bridge in the Northwest Territory spanned Wills Creek here in 1802, along Ebenezer Zane’s narrow trace, which preceded the National Road. In the decades before the Civil War, the city thrived, serving travelers along this important thoroughfare; later Cambridge became a regional center for the coal, glass, and pottery industries. The arrival of the interstate system in the 1960s and the nearby construction of the largest interchange in the world at the time (connecting Interstates 70 and 77) rendered Cambridge’s busy main street a sleepier place but one insulated from the off-ramp culture the interstate system spawned. Today Cambridge’s historic downtown has undergone a remarkable revitalization, and this town of 11,000 is an American jewel. Cambridge celebrates the heritage of this town and offers glimpses into the lives, labor, and leisure of its residents. |
Brain Entrainment in Meditation on January 31 2009 » 0 comments
