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Home arrow Monthly Newsletter arrow May 2008 Newsletter
May 2008 Newsletter PDF Print E-mail
Monthly Newsletter

May 2008 Newsletter

Your article here free of charge (max 400 words).
Whisper poetry welcomes articles of news (not longer than 400 words) but publication at the discretion of the editor.
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In This Issue:
A thought for the Month by Stan Almendro
Whisper Poetry News by Giselle Visser
Life Is an Eternal Present by Mary Hession
Article by Matt Mason, Poetry Menu by Matt Mason
Another Colorful Life - Andre West by Gregory Huff
Robert Frost Poetry Competition Seeks Poems, Haiku - Media Release
Michaela Sefler Mystical Poet by Inner Circle Publishing
Poem: To Mom on Mothers day by Michelle Retief
Coming close to Angels Forum posted by "ugerbig"


 

stan_may08.jpgA Thought for the Month
By Stan Almendro

 

Angelic Moments
angelic_moments.jpg
Mother Teresa said, when interviewed about the time she spent with God said, “We just sit there together.” Was & is this an Angelic Moment?

This months article (” Angelic Moments”) is not to prove the existence OR non-existence of angels. It is also not an abuse of your time & interest to turn this into “ A Session of Preaching”. It is however a desire to get us all to focus on those beautiful & most precious moments in life that we, often miss, or are too busy to see.

Besides my own expression of “ Angelic Moments” I have listed the precious thoughts of readers & what they believe is (or can be) An Angelic Moment”

As you continue through this wonderful thought of (Angelic Moments”) you might just pause a while & ponder on what you believe to be “ An Angelic Moment”. Is it perhaps an experience you have had which you believe is such an “Angelic Moment” then express this to the multitude of readers who have subscribed to this newsletter.

My aim & sincere desire is to inspire us to not only believe or understand this place of quiet rest BUT to experience it or begin to search out these moments in our lives.

I invite you to sit back and enjoy the sincere heart felt moments of others who believe this is their “Angelic Moment”


angelic_1.jpg An angelic moment to me is to experience the inner peace and tranquillity in knowing that LIFE is such a beautiful gift and that I have been blessed with love, happiness and kindness and, the ability to share my life, love and happiness with the people I truly adore
angelic_2.jpg An Angelic Moment for me is not just knowing about or even understanding togetherness BUT to Experience it
angelic_5.jpg Baby & Toddler Competition - N1 City, 2008
angelic_6.jpgangelic_7.jpg These are pictures both of my younger brothers, one of which the doctors said wasn't going to make it at birth, due to the main part being his lungs were under developed, now almost 17 years later he has proved them wrong. The doctors said to my folks that they have done everything in their power to rectify the 'problem'.

The very next morning after this conversation, my mother went up to ICU and noticed that he was now only on 98% ventilation support, that was the turning point for my little brother who is ironically bigger than myself today.  

My Angelic moment is Having These wonderful GUYS as brothers

Lian
angelic_3.jpg Another reader says that her Angelic Moment is Being Alone yet Standing Tall

An Angelic Moment is getting what belongs to you BUT being able to stay friends
angelic_4.jpg An Angelic Moment is to know that there are ANGELS that are real & that they show such love & compassion

An angelic moment of life with its’ greatest impact & sense of real contentment & acceptance

Mary, may your sense of INSPIRATION just soar into the deepest recesses of every heart
The Editor

Life Is an Eternal Present
By Mary Hession

Life is an eternal present
In the ocean of cosmic time
The script is written upon each shore
Awash with poetic rhyme

The ebbing and flowing of Life Itself
In breaths and out breaths sublime
Constantly changing and moving on
Caressing the sands of time

Each story is written upon the shore
In magnificent cosmic show
They remain for a while for all to share
Then surrender to Divine Flow

Erasing each tale the shore is wiped clean
Swept in majestic great style
Returned to Life’s sea from whence all is born
Reformed in Itself to beguile

Waves of new life again do come forth
Their essence the same as before
Dancing and tumbling in waves of delight
Cascading on new Divine shore

Forever and ever The Tide of Creation
Expands then contracts in Itself
Eternally present no future no past
Just Isness All Knowing All Seeing

For All Is of now one moment Divine
Life Itself through forgetfulness knowing
The natural cycles of Nature Herself
Cosmic Laws to mankind ever showing

© Mary Hession

Please feel free to contact the editor This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it



giselle_march.jpgWhisper Poetry News
by Giselle Visser




Make Every Moment count!!!!

Theodore Seuss (The famous American writer and cartoonist 1904 – 1991) said: “Don’t cry because it’s over. Smile because it happened.”

This is so true. We need to grab a hold of each and every opportunity or event that comes our way, do this best we can, achieve the highest results, make the moment count and enjoy every minute of what we are doing.

When we’ve given our best, done what we had to, then we need to look back and “smile because it happened”. So often we would rather mope or regret that a time or experience has come and gone, instead of being grateful that we were so blessed with these experiences. May I challenge you this month? Then next time an opportunity or event or even a challenge comes your way, make the best of it, enjoy every moment and day you have been granted and when you’ve had your moment, lived your dream, achieved your goal, do what Theodore said: “DON’T CRY BECAUSE IT’S OVER – SMILE BECAUSE IT HAPPENED!!!!”

Regards
Giselle
No Rush Tours

 


Article by Matt Mason, Poetry Menu
by Matt Mason

Back in February of 2000, it seemed to me that there were maybe 3 poetry readings in my home town, Omaha, Nebraska (about dead center in the continental U.S.), and usually all 3 on the same night. I figured if there was a simple, user-friendly and well-maintained website out there to list these things, maybe people would use it when they're planning events and also when they're looking for a poetry event to go to. I knew a little about making websites, I figured I could do it and it'd be easy seeing as there are only three events a month, right?

It turns out, when you look for poetry events, they are definitely there in Nebraska. But before I started The Poetry Menu, it took some searching to find out about many of these. How much is out there? Last April (National Poetry Month) had over fifty events on The Menu, but even a summer month like July can have 30 events listed, mostly in the state's two largest cities, Omaha and Lincoln.

My hope is just that it lays a decent, accessible groundwork for poetry information. The easier it is for an audience to know about poetry readings, the more people we'll have at these readings and the more attention we'll be giving to poetry, hopefully inspiring better and better writing and performance of poetry.

Yes, running the website takes many more hours per month to maintain than I expected when I figured there were just three events per month to keep track of, but it's been worth it. I love a good poetry reading; anything I can do to see more happen is time well spent.

Matt Mason
Poetry Menu



Another Colorful Life - Andre West
by Gregory Huff

This is an article based upon an interview of Andre West of Dream Quest One by Gregory Huff. Andre West is a writer, a poet, a dreamer, creator and founder of Dream Quest One, a poetry and writing contest. The Dream Quest One Poetry & Writing Contest is open to anyone who loves to arrange words into the beautiful art of poetry or to write a story that’s worth telling everyone. And to all who have the ability to dream. Write a poem, 30 lines or fewer on any subject or write a short story, 5 pages or fewer on any theme to win cash prizes in this unique competition. Visit www.dreamquestone.com for details and to enter.

What was your inspiration for starting Dream Quest One?
My inspiration for starting Dream Quest One goes as far back as my early childhood education. Besides playing with Lincoln Logs and Army Men toys, I remember reading books and learning nursery rhymes. Particularly, I really loved the times when my mother would read bedtime stories to me. So about the age of five or six years old, I began reading books on my own. This is when my mother let me read bedtime stories to her. She told me that she enjoyed my reading so much that I would put her to sleep instead. Enthusiastically, with childlike confidence, I wanted to read stories and Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes to my dear mother in order to show her that I can read. In doing so, it made me feel good to start and finish reading a complete book. As a child, my favorite book to read was The Bike Lesson by Stan and Jan Berenstain. I guess you could say that I was hooked on phonics at an early age.

I learned that a picture is worth a thousand words. Noticing that many children’s books contained illustrations, I saw that those pictures only reinforced what I had already read. Discovering my imagination took me to far off places in the universe where I could visit by reading words alone. Therefore, in my youthful mind pictures had become redundant. Not that there was anything wrong with a colorful illustration but pictures seem to replace words I could be reading. I then asked my mother to get me books without pictures. Since a picture is worth a thousand words then a word is worth a thousand and one pictures I could imagine, I thought. And she brought me all sorts of new and exciting tales to read.

My imagination began to grow and develop while opening my mind. During this time, I lived with my family at a government housing project building in “The Village” called the “Row Houses” in the A.B.L.A. Homes at Chicago, Illinois. Located on the West Side, I lived right across the street from Fosco Park. My big brother and I use to play in the dirty field, ride bikes, skateboard, roller-skate, flying kites, and even ice skate during the winter months. We always had what we needed so being poor didn’t bother us that much. We hardly even thought about it sometimes, but we knew. We use to eat maple syrup and bread sandwiches back then. Hey, it kept us alive. I’d still eat one until this day.

As years went by, I was considered a “gifted” child at Medill Elementary School. I really didn’t know what “gifted” meant since I didn’t receive too many gifts back then. All I remember is that a few other students and I had to take more advanced classes than our regular homeroom peers. I went to different instructors for reading, music and art classes. At this time my reading comprehension, vocabulary, and verbal skills were considered above average. I didn’t understand what that really meant because all I wanted to do was have fun with my friends and play. It was nice to take a break from the monotony of being in the same classroom setting all day.

So from first grade class through junior high school I remember attending Junior Great Books classes. We read stories such as The Velveteen Rabbit, The Ugly Duckling, and The Emperor’s New Clothes, discussing what happened in those stories as a group. It helped develop the essential skills of reading carefully, thinking critically, listening intently, and speaking and writing persuasively. I had fun participating in those group discussions and did very well in English Grammar subjects. I wrote essay compositions and poems for classroom exercises and homework. I never stopped reading books. My teachers would always praise my ability to produce very creative writing. It felt good to write, whether it was a short story or poem to transform thoughts and feelings into words, convey messages to readers, producing a desired outcome or effect. I love writing. It’s that simple.

I remember having my essays, stories and poems posted in my classroom and on the hallway walls at my schools. I continued writing but there was something else about me. I always wanted to fit in with the popular students. And being smart was not very popular in these circles. Also, there were some negative influences from family members and so-called friends that steered me to mischief at times. So I became shy and timid about showing my gifts and talents to those around me. I tried to please everyone as I grew up. In doing so, I was never fully able to express myself or “be myself” so to speak. I usually wrote a story or poem as required from my teachers. Once in 5th grade, I kept a composition book full of essays I wrote throughout the school year. There was a time when I went home with a note from my teacher to my mother. She told my mother that she didn’t believe I had written a certain composition and ‘please don’t do your child’s homework for him.’ Well, my mother didn’t help me. I wrote the story while sitting alone in my room. My mother couldn’t believe I had created such a great story when I showed her before turning in my homework the following day. Nonetheless, I wrote it, only to have my composition book thrown into the trash can on the last day of school. I really regret throwing those stories away. My mother said she really wanted to keep that book too. Usually I write a story or poem when I’m inspired or motivated by a profound person, a memorable place, a wonderful thing, or an outstanding occurrence in my life.

Mrs. Smiley, a strict and disciplined school librarian, at Gallistel Language Academy once pulled me aside to say, “Andre, you really have a talent for creative writing. Keep it up. I want you to remember that.” She even wrote her wonderful praise to me in my elementary school graduation autograph book. Writing a book became a somewhat of a dream that might be possible, like unicorns and fire breathing dragons. But I never went deeper into the thought of it back then.

During high school, I continued occasionally writing poems and stories about my life and the things that I have done. There was a local writers’ newsletter that sponsored a poetry contest. I entered a poem not knowing what would happen. To my surprise I won an honorable mention and received a big red dictionary. That contest really gave me a healthy dose of inspiration to continue writing. I always loved poetry and writing even through college. I wrote more stories while taking English courses. Receiving an A.A. degree in Liberal Arts Education it really didn’t dawn on me until I paused and reflected about the direction I have been going in life. To support myself I have been a landscaper and a front-end maintenance worker for a major supermarket chain in Chicago, Illinois. In whatever job I’ve done, I like to do it right or I won’t do it all.

There was always the fear of rejection that haunted me all of my life. I always sought approval form others for fear of being criticized. I was also afraid of failing and succeeding, thinking disaster would come to bring me down and out. I was scared to take a risk, to make mistakes, to let go and live life as I believed in my heart. Sometimes family members mean well, but they may also discourage one from pursuing their calling in life. They may sound like Glum from Gulliver’s Travels saying, “You never make it”. All the wasted time I spent trying to be whatever someone else wanted me to be has passed. I got tired of being afraid to venture off into the unknown. I always have been and always will be writer, a poet and a dreamer, not in that exact order though.

I know that there are others out there like me who have let negative thinking and criticism hold them back from becoming the writer that they truly are. There is someone right here and now who needs to know that dreams are not just for other people. Dreams are for you too. It’s okay to dream for dreams do come true. You can write until your heart is content.

On March 17, 2005 I decided to launch the Dream Quest One Poetry & Writing Contest. This is my avenue to connect with poets and writers from all walks of life. All are welcome to share poems and short stories with the world today. I encourage anyone with a dream of writing to give him or herself a chance. This contest is a labor of love to me. I put my heart, spirit and soul to make it so. Somehow I try to reach out to everyone who enters this contest. This is my connection to humanity. My gateway to all writers, poets and dreamers is Dreamquestone.Com.

What works have you written?
Up until now I have only written short stories and poems for myself. I am a work in progress. Recently, I have just started writing on a deeper level in my pursuit of being published. I hope to complete and publish my book in the near future. So stay tuned to Dream Quest One for updates.

How long have you been offering these contests?
I created and established Dream Quest One Poetry & Writing Contest on March 17, 2005. So far I have held four previous contests. Now the contests are being held semi-annually. The closing dates are usually July 31 and December 31.

Who judges the entries and by what criteria?
I have a unique panel of randomly selected independent judges. Having a background in education, I choose students from colleges and universities to become members of the Dare to Dream Master Selection Committee. Judges may be picked from the University of Illinois at Chicago, DePaul University, Loyola University, Roosevelt University, Harold Washington College, Chicago State University, Florida A& M, Columbia College, and National Louis University to name a few.

How many entries do you typically receive?
The Dream Quest One Poetry & Writing Contest is still relatively new to the world of literature. It typically has received from 300 to 405 entries in this unique dual contest. I am working toward spreading the message out to anyone who writes and dreams of writing.

Describe the most unusual entry you’ve received.
Although there have been many entries that made me “think,” sometimes well-known authors, poets and people most notable in all walks of life from around the world have entered this competition. However, I would say that Mr. Lester Colodny sent the most unusual entry I can think of right now. It is a story titled, “Monkey Business” It was a hilarious and unusual short story. Also, Lester Colodny happens to be a producer, director, writer actor and advertising maven, with several Clios (the academy award for advertising) and an Emmy to his credit, has written a memoir about his life and the people he helped while working with the William Morris Agency in New York (people such as Neil and Danny Simon, Mel Brooks, and Woody Allen). He created, produced and wrote “The Munsters” and wrote episodes for the “Get Smart” and “Love American Style” television shows. Wow, the list of his credits goes on. He received an Emmy for Best Director, Writer, and Producer for The Baja Marimbas and Jack Benny Show. Now that is usual!

Can participants recycle their entries for other writing contest?
Yes, the beauty of this contest is that all participants retain the rights to recycle their literary works of art as entries for other writing contests. See Official Rules for details.

How do you promote the winners of the contest?
The winners of the contest are announced and their stories and poems are published online in the Dare to Dream pages. People from all over the world may visit the website to read winning poems and short stories. It’s kind of neat.

What is the largest prize you have ever given?
Dream Quest One awards six prizes totaling $1275.00 in this poetry and short story competition. The largest prize given to contest winners in the Writing Contest is the First Prize in the amount of $500.00. Second Prize is $250.00 and Third Prize is $100.00. The Poetry First Prize is $250.00. Second Prize is $125.00 and Third Prize is $50.00.

Why is encouraging writers so important to you?
Encouraging writers is very important to me because I believe there is a potential for greatness in everyone. There are people who are talented, gifted with the ability to write the most beautiful poetry and creative stories known to man. However, some people like me have felt oppressed, repressed or somehow not able to express themselves due to people, places, things and circumstances. Maybe someone keeps telling you that you will never make it as a writer. Well, I have news for you. Yes, you can. You can change your mind, change your world, dream and make it a reality.

What have you learned as a result of starting your contest?

I have learned many things as a result of starting Dream Quest One. First, I have learned to get outside of myself and consider that the next person I meet just might be a potential present and future great writer or poet. I learned to keep an open mind about people and their cultural and geographical backgrounds. No matter what we think, we are all human beings and have a whole lot in common. It is the similarities, not the differences that help us to understand and relate to the human condition. And we can learn to live together and through our differences. I learned that people share the same hopes, dreams and aspirations in world of writing. Others dream and may need to be awakened to a new beginning in their lives. Writing, whether fiction, non-fiction, science fiction, fantasy, journals, essays, screenplays, diaries or any of the over 50 types of poetry is therapeutic and good to expand the horizons of the mind. By quoting the words in Richard Bach’s story, Jonathan Livingston Seagull, when he discovers the technique of flying: “We can lift ourselves out of ignorance, we can find ourselves as creatures of excellence and intelligence and skill. We can be free! We can learn to fly!”

What is the ultimate goal of your website? What do you wish to achieve?
The ultimate goal of Dream Quest One is to inspire, motivate and encourage anyone who has the desire or love of poetry and writing to continue doing so without fear of failure or success, regardless of negative criticism from others or ourselves. I hope that all who enter will exercise their right and power to dream and work toward making them a reality. That goes for setting realistic and attainable realistic goals in writing. A dream is nothing but a goal with a deadline.

What happens to entries that do not win prizes?
I honestly believe that all those who choose to enter the contest and put forth their best efforts to produce a great story or poem are actually winners themselves. Realistically, there are a total of 3 winners chosen from either poetry or writing contest. However, the entries that do not win may be randomly featured on a page at Dream Quest One from time to time. So be on the look out for more outstanding stories and poems.

How long are winning entries published online?
All contest winners will be showcased on the Dare to Dream (D2D pages ) from the day of winner announcement until the end of the following competition. In the case of the current competition, all winning entries will be posted from January 31, 2008 until July 31, 2008. Thereafter, all winning poems and stories will be kept in Dream Quest One’s archives. In turn they may be brought out at random as featured literary works of art.

Can participants have more than one entry in the contest at a time?
In this unique dual competition participants may enter both the poetry contest and writing contest at the same time. Remember the current contest Postmark deadline is December 31, 2007. All winners will be announced and published in the Dare to Dream pages on January 31, 2008.

Thank you very much for your time and attention to Dream Quest One. If you so choose to enter this contest we will be eagerly looking forward to seeing your literary work. And remember, in whatever you do, “its okay to dream”, for dreams do come true.

CONTACT INFORMATION: Contact: Andre L. West of Dream Quest One, Poetry & Writing Contest, P.O. Box 3141, Chicago, IL 60654 Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Copyright Gregory Huff. Please visit www.CreativeHelps.com for more interviews like this and resources designed to energize your creativity.



Robert Frost Poetry Competition Seeks Poems, Haiku
Media Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
DATE: FEB. 28, 2008
CONTACT: Karen
PHONE: (305) 296-3573
E-MAILmailto:: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

The 14th Annual Key West Robert Frost Poetry Festival is currently accepting entries for its National Poetry Contest, National Haiku Contest, and Monroe County Poetry in Schools Contest. Sponsored by Key West Heritage House, the postmarked deadline for all entries is Monday, March 24, 2008.

Prizes to be awarded in the National Poetry Contest, for adults only, include a $150 First Prize, $75 Second Prize, $50 Third Prize and two Honorable Mentions. There is a $10 entry fee per poem. Checks should be made out to RFPF. Poems must be previously unpublished, 30 lines maximum and mailed as typed copy by the deadline date. Contestants should submit two copies of each poem, with the poet's name, address, phone and e-mail address on one copy only. Style and theme are open to the poet.

The National Haiku Contest, which is also for adults, requires a $10 entry fee, which covers up to three poems. Prizes include a $100 First Prize, $50 Second Prize, $25 Third Prize and two Honorable Mentions.

Haiku to be considered in the competition must appear in a three-line format of up to 17 or fewer syllables. All haiku must contain a seasonal or nature imagery. Two copies of each haiku, typed or neatly hand-written, should be submitted. The poet's name, address, phone and e-mail address should be printed on one copy only.

There is no fee to enter the Monroe County Poetry in Schools Contest, which is for students living in the county, and is divided into three categories: Elementary School (grades 3-5 only), Middle School and High School. Elementary and Middle School awards include a $50 First Prize, $35 Second Prize, $25 Third Prize. High School prizes include a $100 First Prize, $50 Second Prize, $35 Third Prize.

All student poetry should be 30 lines maximum. Please include two copies of each poem typed or neatly hand-written, with the poet's name, address, grade, teacher's name, school, phone and e-mail on one copy only. All submissions should be mailed to: Robert Frost Poetry Contest, Heritage House, 410 Caroline St., Key West, FL 33040.

Winners will be announced at the 14th Annual Robert Frost Poetry Festival, to take place April 9-13, 2008, on the grounds of the Key West Heritage House & Robert Frost Cottage.

For more information about the contest, the festival schedule, registration fees and workshops being offered, please go to heritagehousemuseum.org or direct your questions to This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .



Michaela Sefler Mystical Poet
by Inner Circle Publishing

Michaela Sefler is an mystical poet living in Montreal, Canada. Her poetry is spiritual and esoteric and her poems allude to ancient ideals. In her poetry she draws on the Qabbala, and other ancient
writings, to convey a message of hope, and survival describing present realities in the light of ancient truths.

She has six published compilations of poetry. Still true, A fortress in my heart, The sun is hot, Through the ages, Seven stars, and healing tree.

HEALING TREE by Michaela Sefler with Innercircle Publishing : In this compilation, Michaela presents a series of poems that convey healing as a mystical state supported by an ancient system of faith and understanding, describing belief in a creator as the root essence of our existence.

She describes nature and spirituality as interconnected to contain a reality where possibility is actual. She draws on ancient Qabbalistic knowledge, the poems are Inspired by esoteric work and knowledge, and are illustrated with symbols to enlighten the reader.




To Mom on Mothers day
by Michelle Retief

You gave us life,
You made us strong,
You’ve been here for us all along,
When we were sad, when we were blue,
You were always the one to come through,
When I was weak you stood by me,
And fought away all you could see,
When we were wrong,
You showed us right,
You taught us how to see the light,
You always know how to make our day,
Without you near the sky is grey,
You help us out,
Wherever you can,
Being a mom, you always have a plan,
You stand by us, in whatever we do,
And sometimes threaten with a shoe...
You always wake us up,
With coffee or tea,
Most days with a lot of difficulty,
There are some days,
When we’re not at our best,
But that is just apart of our little test,
To see how far we can really go,
Until you’re boiling from head to toe,
We really never do it on purpose,
Although that’s probably,
How it looks at the surface,
All we want to do is make you proud,
It may not seem like it,
Because we don’t say it out loud,
You’ve shown us how to care,
And how to share,
With you around,
There’s music in the air,
You always find a way,
To make everything fun,
Especially when,
We’re out and about in the sun,
You work all day,
But always make time to help us,
In whatever we do,
This is why... MOM,

WE LOVE YOU!!!





Coming close to Angels
Forum posted by "ugerbig"

In our lives we experience situations in which there seems to be no way out.

All our brainpower, the ratio, logical thinking, and practicality lead us nowhere but deeper and deeper into desperation. Since we are humans, we learned to define ourselves by our power to act and to create, to control and to organize our lives actively and not to wait around passively. Especially in the Western Civilization with its emphasize on productivity and activity, people have a hard time coping with situations that seem hopeless.

"You are what you do, not what you feel" seems to be the basis of all western thinking, thus diminishing the need to sit down in quiet reflection, listening to the voices within ourselves and by that finding a higher power that may guide us through those difficult times.

Quiet reflection and mediation is seen us unproductive and wasteful, because it is passive and not productive in the sense of Western philosophy.

We, being children of the Western World, have difficulties accepting passiveness as a useful means for guidance. Passiveness makes us feel powerless and weak, it makes us helpless and thus, angry. This anger turns towards other people or the circumstances involved in the situation we are in at that moment. Often that anger turns against ourselves.

Anger is a powerful force. It is self-induced poison of the mind and the soul. It can eat us alive. It is the reason for emotional terrorism against ourselves - feelings laying in wait like snipers, attacking when least expected. Anger is the emotional bomb, about to go off at any minute, destroying everything around it. And coming from within ourselves, we are like suicide-bombers, who get blown apart in the attack.

But as all feelings, anger has its reason, its use, too. Feelings are never "good" or "bad", they just are. They are the warning signs of our soul. Anger tells us that something is definitely wrong . It is the signal that we did not pay enough attention to our own borders and limits. It tells us that we feel used, betrayed, cheated and sold by others, pushed into corners, misunderstood and misinterpreted. It tells us that somebody came close to old wounds and touched some fears deep within ourselves.

Like all feelings, anger throws us back onto ourselves, because we are the origin of our own feelings. They come from within us, not from the outside and thus can only be worked on within ourselves.

We cannot change the motives and actions of other people - only our own - and anger can eat away our soul if its inert power is not used for the only positive effect it can have - the change within ourselves.

This change within ourselves can be a long and sometimes painful process. It takes all our responsibility and our emotional strength to go and face ourselves as the one and only reason for the reality we experience.

We each are our own cause and our own reason, and we are each to ourselves our own solution.

In that process we all need help: we need help in facing and accepting ourselves and giving up control over others and their feelings and we need help in finding the peace of mind we need for that long way. We need something that helps us accepting that sometimes nothing can be done, but wait. That this time of waiting is the time given to us to use for ourselves and our inner healing and development.

In times like that the acceptance of any kind of higher power can be an enormous help to us. It can help us in giving up control, because we are not the ones who change anything, except ourselves. It will give us the power to let go of others and concentrate on our path. The believe in Angels as guiding forces, as benevolent spirits, who are always with us, can be a way out of our endless helter-skelter of feelings and the round-about of our thoughts.

The believe in Angels is not linked to any religious denomination: it just is the visualization of that higher force that guides us. It is the deep believe in being protected by something or someone, who is kind to us and means us well. It appeals to the inner child in us, which is in deep need of such love, guidance and protection, especially if we chose the difficult way of finding ourselves.

And haven't we all experienced "angelic moments": moments in which somebody came to us like a gift from heaven, somebody soothing our pain by giving us love, somebody showing us wisdom, somebody seeing us, our "real" self, somebody making us laugh again when we were crying and somebody whose touch brought life back into us in moments when we felt dead? Somebody whose touch healed all the pain we have ever felt, made us "whole", if only for one single moment in time? Somebody giving answers to questions we never have asked aloud, somebody seeing our desperation and need and not turning away in disgust?

Somebody giving us the necessary wake-up call that lead us back to the path of health and well-being? Somebody who accompanied us for a span in time: a second, a moment, a month, a year - but whose presence made all the difference at that special point in our lives? An "angelic encounter" cannot be measured by continuance, it is nothing which we can make last by willing it to last, it is not linked to one person,

It cannot be measured on a basis of "give" and "take", it refuses all definition as a "business deal", it cannot be waited for, nor sought-after. It just can be experienced as what it is: a moment in which somebody does not ask about costs, or advantage or gain or pain or hardship, but just turns to us and is there just for us. Those people we encounter along the way, are humans, just like we are, they have their strength and weaknesses just as we have them and they make their mistakes. But in the moment in which they are Angels to us, they transcend that human weakness for a small time span and become something larger than just themselves. Not being aware of doing that for others at that single moment in time, makes for a true "angelic moment" - being send as an Angel to someone is not about enhancing our own value or ego. Unawareness of the good that is done is a necessity.

The ultimate beauty in those encounters lies in the fact that not only the one who has been "visited", feels better after the visitation, but that the human being who gave something like that, feels that his or her life has become richer, fuller, more satisfying after giving. The warm glow in our hearts long after the encounter tells us, if we have been Angels for a short moment in time. The satisfaction after such a deed can hardly be measured by any standards and it can hardly be put into words.

It is one of the main sources of happiness in life and thus something we all need to experience. The awareness that we all have the Angel within us, that some higher power will send us to someone who needs us, at the right moment in time, will help us to be kind to ourselves and on our lacks and weaknesses.

The awareness that at the right time an Angel will be send to us, helps us to be patient and calm with ourselves and the long path in front of us. The awareness that some higher power will see to the equal contribution of both giving and receiving, will help us to overcome our urgency and the pressure we feel in our attempts to be "good" and to do right by others.

It is a way out of the anger-trap if we learn to lay some responsibility into the hands of a higher power and thus free ourselves. Discovering the Angel within ourselves and all around us, makes us less angry and kinder to our existence on that planet.







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