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There's a mystical vibration surrounding this work for a couple of reasons. First, the museum-quality artwork is in a league of its own. Second, the messages from the four poets transcend time and bounce off the walls of remembering.Putting this book together and contributing to the messages opened another psychic avenue for me to travel.Reading Rumi's 800-hundred-year-old thoughts again was a treat. And then absorbing more esoteric thoughts from a non-physical personality called Seth brought me to an exhilarating bend in my awareness trail.The underlying message in this book is a simple one. Our beliefs create our perceptions. And the choices from those perceptions become our experiences in some way.The trick is identifying our intricate belief system. We have core beliefs about religion, science, sex, relationships, perception, the senses, duplicity, physical creation, emotion, and truth. And they help create our reality.Mixed in with those core beliefs are beliefs we create through associations and influences. Those psychic messages color the various aspects of our core beliefs. So, sifting through a system that started before birth and continues as we age is a challenging task.In the book,¿¿Paul Harmon's verbal artistry brings clarity to his creative mission. With innate understanding, Harmon uses words to describe what he manifests physically. Harmon fans, and new friends, will come away knowing more about Paul Harmon and his value-fulfilling works of art after visiting The Lawn Party. Seth drops a few hints about belief sifting. And Rumi lets us know our beliefs connect us no matter the language. His different introductions to the 30 short non-marked chapters signal a change in the poetic weather in some way. The 30 chapters flow into each other, thanks to Harmon's poetic review of his work and his incredible Her Face art collection.
"Mingo told me this outward journey is our doing, and we do it to remember we are like the trees. We have deep inner roots that touch the roots of other inner trees. We grow from the energy within our inner personality's root system. We live in groups and grow branches. And we create leafy, colorful expressions to physically feel them. When we feel them, our inner personality uses the non-physical energy within those emotions to expand in awareness."That quote comes from my new book "Pine Cone Pandemic With Acorn Dressing." The story, as you can see, is an example of how connected we are to other forms of consciousness. The characters in the book come from different religious and ethnic backgrounds. But they do have one thing in common. They use their inner personality to communicate with the Pine and Oak trees. The information the group receives from the trees brings more clarity to each person's journey. The information the group receives makes them remember who they are and why they are on this planet. One part of the book takes place at a Mind-Body Expo in Nashville. At the Expo, the group has interactions with what I call in the book "Non-physical energy personalities. And I use the words physical energy personality to describe the personality we use to interact with the people we bring into our physical play. The other characters in this new "Novel Screenplay" are at the Expo to discover new information about themselves. The characters have different opinions about communicating with a non-physical energy personality through a physical-person personality. Each character's experience with a non-physical energy personality brings new thoughts, old beliefs, and current trepidations to the surface.
Do You Remember Your Dreams? Where do we go at night while dreaming? Are our dreams as real as our waking life, and when we dream. . . who are we? Do we see others we know in our present life, or are there visions that seem familiar, but not? Is there something going on while we sleep that goes beyond random thought, and if so, what is the purpose?H. T. Manogue''s Newest Novel, Black Orchid Night, takes the reader on one woman''s journey through the hallways of time. She discovers that her dreams are not just unconscious hallucinations, but factual trips through the uncharted territory of her psyche. Her dreams are portals through which her greater consciousness can express itself..
In Manogue's latest book, Bed, Bosh, and Beyond, he takes us a step further in the process of how we live our lives. Here, we confront the ultimate challenge - death - and we are introduced to Rob, a man who has lived life on his own terms, died, and is brought through a life review whereby he sees segments of his life interspersed with commentary from his afterlife guide played by none other than his hero, George Carlin. Through reflection and insight into behavioral patterns and attitudes expressed throughout his life, Rob comes to a full awareness of the unity of all life regardless of its multiplicity in expression. As readers, we are given an opportunity to reflect upon our own lives and how our attitudes shape us and confine us. Bed, Bosh, and Beyond is in actuality a primer for living...and as we share in his story, we can reshape our own.
Mase Russell chooses to manifest on Earth as a human with Downs syndrome in order to show people they are living behind a veil of this beauty shop they call life, blinded by materialism, greed, and egocentric notions.
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