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Julie graduated from Creighton University with a major in dance and Theology and taught for several years at an inner-city school in Milwaukee. With a desire to expand her knowledge of the arts and spirituality, she attended St. John’s University in Collegeville and completed a Masters in Theology and Liturgical Studies. Over the years, her quest to merge diverse religious beliefs and practices through the commonalities of love and peaceful living, led her to travel, live, and study with shaman practitioners, herbal healers, Native American medicine women, Buddhist priests and other earth-based spiritual teachers. Through these experiences and experiences with global metaphysical teachings, she learned to honor the eternal source of love in all people.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Ideas For Using Home Shrines.

Now when a blockage or undesirable pattern is identified, an individual can sit in meditation at each shrine. One of the shrines will connect and give clarity to the blockage or undesirable pattern. If it’s a pattern which needs to change, determine in your mind what the change looks like. Give the mental image of change, shape, color, depth, and details. Go to the shrine and say, “this is how my change looks. This is what I want in my life.” Now express this new image using one of the shrines. Cleaning and arranging a shrine to revive the energy and to give a fresh look is important.

By visiting the shrine of change, it can assist with the blockage or pattern reminding the individual to do the work given to him/her by the guides in the Akashic realm. The shrine becomes the concrete form of the metaphysical experience.

Naturally there is great depth to the use and application of indigenous ritual. The ritual here is in a very relaxed and simple form. Sometimes in the Western world people hold the belief that if something is too easy than it isn’t going to stick. In the case of ritual, it has to do with frequency not with complexity. Simple ritual is easily performed and easily maintained.

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