Chattering Mind

January 2007 Archives

Wednesday January 31, 2007

Help for Aching Hands and Arms

If your hands, arms, and shoulders ache from long hours at the computer, you might glean good information by reading Ergoblog, a well-executed site that reviews the latest keyboards and desk chairs, and discusses the possible relationship between stress injuries and food allergies.

A full-spectrum, vitamin-B supplement has helped my tendonitis somewhat, and discipling myself to never, never blog on the portable computer at the dining room table, (where the table height is all wrong, and the keyboard is too small) has been helpful too.

Additionally, I'm loving Microsoft's Ergo Keyboard 4000 right now. And this DVD of hand and arm exercises is excellent. Here's a longer blog post on the subject. I also correct my children's posture when they're at the computer and when they'll let me. It's my belief that if I weren't the Music Man, there'd be trouble in River City.

Wednesday January 31, 2007

Bringing Light to the World on Candlemas

This Friday, February 2nd is Candlemas, the Roman Catholic "Feast of the Presentation of Our Lord," when priests bless candles before the Mass.

O holy Lord, almighty Father, eternal God...thou hast commanded the bees to produce this liquid of wax which has been made into a perfect candle...Deign to bless and sanctify these candles for human use, for the welfare of body and soul both on land and on water...As these tapers burn with visible fire and dispel the darkness of night, so may our hearts with the help of thy grace be enlightened by the invisible fire of the splendor of the Holy Ghost, and may be free from all blindness of sin. Clarify the eyes of our minds that we may see what is pleasing to thee and conducive to our salvation. After the dark perils of this life let us be worthy to reach the eternal light.

--Prayer Source: Holyday Book, The by Francis X. Weiser, S.J., Harcourt, Brace and Company, Inc., New York, 1956.

You can also see this day as a good time to welcome the returning light of spring by lighting every candle in your house and blessing their light in the presence of your family. Waverly Fitzgerald of School of the Seasons sees Candlemas as a fine time to solidify New Year's resolutions and pledges. Click here to participate in her Candlemas Pledge, where you can articulate how you want to live, change, or help bring more light to the world (since we were recently on that subject).

Beliefnet offers articles on Candlemas here and here and here.

Wednesday January 31, 2007

The City of Light's Eco Blackout

Light and fire seems to be today's themes.

On Thursday evening, the Eiffel Tower's 20,000 bulbs will go dark for five minutes.

Environmental activists have arranged the micro blackout to coincide with the release of a major report--which some predict will be dire--on the current state of global warming.

Learn more about the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's report here and here.

Tuesday January 30, 2007

What to Do When the World Sucks

Yesterday's blog post about John Mayer's hit song "Waiting for the World to Change" inspired a great conversation on how it currently feels to be stuck with the world as it is (most obviously stuck with the Iraq War). Reader Kannbrown65 wrote:

"Well, to be fair, the song is specifically about the 'Iraq War.' And, if you're one of the people who never supported it, who voted against those who did support it, and watched two election cycles of being, literally, ignored... that is the sort of thing that is fueling the song. It is hard to 'be the change,' when the change is more than a mindset, but an actual, physical action that is taking place now... And it's partly mirrored by the recent poll, where a majority of Americans were noted as just 'waiting for the Bush presidency to be over.'"

Then this came in from reader Khoffmaster:

"YES, WE SHOULD BE ACTIVE TO TRY AND CHANGE THE WORLD, BUT...YOU TRY AND TRY AND IT JUST DOESN'T SEEM TO CHANGE. SO ESSENTIALLY YOU ARE WAITING FOR THE WORLD TO CHANGE EVEN IF YOU ARE ACTIVELY TRYING TO CHANGE IT. PLUS, HE IS RIGHT, MY GENERATION IS GOING TO SOMEDAY INHERIT THIS WORLD AND IT SEEMS AS IF IT WILL BE A FRUITLESS ATTEMPT TO CHANGE IT IF IT CAN'T EVEN CHANGE A LITTLE NOW. IT WILL BE A HARD REALITY TO DEAL WITH WHEN WE HAVE TO MAKE THE DECISIONS."

I understand the feelings completely. I often feel helpless myself, and I daily witness the anger rising in my twelve-year-old who keeps lamenting in the car coming home from school that my generation has so screwed up the world that it will take his whole lifetime to rearrange its priorities. If we all get to live. ( I do seem to recall saying the same thing to my parents, though the situation today, I agree, seems worse.)

So how can one change the world with a landscape of profound helplessness and anger as a backdrop? Spiritual teachers don't always seem reliable since they banter on and on about finding bliss in the "now" moment. Well, what if this "now" sucks?

Meditation teacher Jon Kabat-Zinn says--true to form--that we've got to be at one with the despair, at one with the horror when it's there. This is different from being disengaged, and waiting for the world to change. This is more active. This is useful, passionate anger. He writes:

"Meditation is... about allowing yourself to be exactly where you are and as you are, and for the world to be exactly as it is in this moment as well. This is not so easy, since there is always something that we can rightly find fault with if we stay inside our thinking. And so there tends to be great resistance on the part of the mind and body to settle into things just as they are, even for a moment. That resistance to what is may be even more compounded if we are meditating because we hope that by doing so, we can effect change, make things different, improve our own lives, and contribute to improving the lot of the world."

"That doesn't mean that your aspirations to effect positive change, make things different and improve your life and the lot of the world are inappropriate. Those are all very real possibilities. Just by meditating, by sitting down and being still, you can change yourself and the world. In fact, just by sitting down and being still, in a small but not insignificant way, you already have.

"But the paradox is that you can only change yourself or the world if you get out of your own way for a moment, and give yourself over and trust in allowing things to be as they already are, without pursuing anything, especially goals that are products of your thinking. Einstein put it quite cogently: “The problems that exist in the world today cannot be solved by the level of thinking that created them.” Implication: We need to develop and refine our mind and its capacities for seeing and knowing, for recognizing and transcending whatever motives and concepts and habits of unawareness may have generated or compounded the difficulties we find ourselves embroiled within, a mind that knows and sees in new ways, that is motivated differently. This is the same as saying we need to return to our original, untouched, unconditioned mind.

"How can we do this? Precisely by taking a moment to get out of our own way, to get outside of the stream of thought and sit by the bank and rest for a while in things as they are underneath our thinking, or as Soen Sa Nim liked to say, “before thinking.” That means being with what is for a moment, and trusting what is deepest and best in yourself, even if it doesn't make any sense to the thinking mind. Since you are far more than the sum of your thoughts and ideas and opinions, including your thoughts of who you are and of the world and the stories and explanations you tell yourself about all that, dropping in on the bare experience of the present moment is actually dropping in on just the qualities you may be hoping to cultivate -- because they all come out of awareness, and it is awareness that we fall into when we stop trying to get somewhere or to have a special feeling and allow ourselves to be where we are and with whatever we are feeling right now. Awareness itself is the teacher, the student, and the lesson..."

This passage comes from the wonderful book "Coming to Our Senses: Healing Ourselves and the World Through Mindfulness."

Tuesday January 30, 2007

Starting the Day with the 'Man in the Mirror'

CM reader Lilit Marcus mentioned the Michael Jackson song "Man in the Mirror" as the musical antidote to "Waiting for the World to Change."(The Jackson YouTube.com link I've given you here gets particularly terrific when the gospel choir walks out on stage.) This song definitely ranks as one of my favorite getting-up-to-face-the-world songs. Here are some lyrics, and here's a link to the whole piece as written and composed by Siedah Garrett and Glen Ballard.

I'm starting with the man in the mirror
I'm asking him to change his ways
And no message could have been any clearer
If you wanna make the world a better place
Take a look at yourself, and then make a change!


You can hear the influence of Jackson's friend and teacher Marianne Williamson. And hmmmm, seeing Jackson perform this powerfully dynamic number makes me a little sad I ever was compelled to write this. Oh, and have you heard? Jermaine Jackson is trying to get brother Mike to become a Muslim.

Tuesday January 30, 2007

The Coming Cosmic Set-up

Here's an astrological view of the coming months and years from astrologer Shelley Ackerman, excerpted from an article about Pluto's busy travels through our universe's "Galactic Center." This makes interesting reading even if you don't give a flip about astrology....

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Monday January 29, 2007

Waiting for the World to Change? I Hope Not.

I was shopping at a budget clothing store this past weekend when the song "Waiting for the World to Change" came over the loud speakers. As if on cue, every aproned clerk in the place started mournfully singing along as...

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Monday January 29, 2007

Applauding Barbaro's Pluck and Bravery

Barbaro died today. Here's a lovely YouTube.com tribute to the race horse that struggled with a debilitating injury and inspired so many....

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Sunday January 28, 2007

The Writing's on the Wall

I am comforted by words. I like having them around me. And I've always wanted to paint or stencil inspirational quotes in certain choice nooks of my home. But with the demise of rub-on press type, this hasn't been possible......

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Friday January 26, 2007

Twelve Steps, Twelve Stones

00px;" src="http://www.beliefnet.com/imgs/tout/story/sobrietystone_tiny.jpg " border="0" alt="" />I found this link to "Sobriety Stone" jewelry online today, and think it's a wonderful idea. On the site, you'll also find this lovely story of one customer's close relationship with her own Serenity Prayer...

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Friday January 26, 2007

Loving Yourself Inside Out

In response to yesterday's post about personal transformation, a thoughtful CM reader named Barb wrote this:I'm a woman who's 48-years-old and am a primary caregiver for a special needs son who has seizures, and is both mentally and physically challenged....

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Friday January 26, 2007

My Introduction to the Heart Sutra

"Every sentient being has the potential to be a Buddha...every mind, every sentient being; the ultimate nature of mind is pure."--His Holiness the Dalai Lama, in his explanation of the Heart Sutra, a meditation I've been doing at home lately...

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Thursday January 25, 2007

Deepak: "Transform, Serve, Connect"

I love this short conversation with Deepak Chopra on how to make the world a better place. His helpful formula can be boiled down to three words: "Transform, Serve, Connect."Today, let's just look at the first part: transformation. A lot...

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Thursday January 25, 2007

'Bitch' Mag Explains the New Politics of Knitting

Drop your subscription to Allure and start subscribing to bitch, a magazine that has billed itself as a "feminist response to pop culture" for more than a decade. This publication's brazen quality may seem off-putting at first if you're older...

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Wednesday January 24, 2007

Super Blankie: The Ultimate 'Not Me' Object

When Chattering son number one came down to the planet, I purchased a $30, 12-inch-square blanket deliberately manufactured to be a beloved "bankie" like Linus had in the cartoon strip "Peanuts." The famous object relations theorist D.W. Winnicottcalled these transitional...

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Wednesday January 24, 2007

Exposing Kids to the Pageant and Heartbreak of Government

We have a ritual at our house. I should have mentioned it yesterday. Come what may, school be damned, we get our kids (now 10 and 12) to sit through the State of the Union address, significant political debates, and...

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Tuesday January 23, 2007

Just How 'Fearless' Is Al Gore Now?

Al Gore was really the second environmentally-attuned presidential candidate we'd ever had (preceded only by California governor Jerry Brown), but despite the fact that Gore was talking about ecology and the human spirit in the mid 1980s, he wasn't viewed...

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Tuesday January 23, 2007

The God Blogalogue Continues

"Your assertion of nothingness at the end of our mortal lives is no more and no less verifiable than my assertion of somethingness. And yet I do not accuse you of lying--to yourself or to others. I respect your existential...

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Tuesday January 23, 2007

As You Ask, So Shall You Be

"Human life is a journey whose end is not in sight. Searching, longing and questioning is in our DNA. Who we are and what we will become is determined by the questions that animate us, and by those we refuse...

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Monday January 22, 2007

This 1916 Song Is Hitting a Chord

Here's a lovely old song from World War I that articulates timely sentiments for me: "I didn't raise my boy to be a soldier,I brought him up to be my pride and joy.Who dares to place a musket on his...

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Monday January 22, 2007

On Abortion: Can You Relate to An Opposing Side?

This Sunday's New York Times article about an alleged "post-abortion syndrome," got me thinking about a D.C.-based group called The Search For Common Ground. The group, which existed from 1993 to 2000, sponsored a project called The Common Ground Network...

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Monday January 22, 2007

Remember This?

"Too many people in America believe that if you are pro-choice that means pro-abortion. It doesn't. I don't want abortion. Abortion should be the rarest thing in the world. I am actually personally opposed to abortion. But I don't believe...

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Friday January 19, 2007

Will Social Networking Replace Diary Writing?

Everybody's writing today. We're crafting emails that would make our high school English teacher proud, posting pithy comments on blogs, and editorializing on our own web pages. Will this kind of discourse replace the act of writing private thoughts in...

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Friday January 19, 2007

Is 'Idol' Too Mean?

Coming off that last post, I hope I don't sound cranky, but I'm pretty turned off the current "American Idol" craze. Wait, I'll rephrase that--I'm observing the "American Idol" craze, and here's what I think.While I've never made this ratings...

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Thursday January 18, 2007

Made in Heaven: The Sam Harris/ Andrew Sullivan 'Blogalogue'

I have to say that the ongoing "blogalogue" (a relatively new term that merges dialogue with blog) between atheist Sam Harris and iconoclastic Christian Andrew Sullivan promises to be one of the best things Beliefnet has ever run. Kudos to...

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Thursday January 18, 2007

Hands-On Reiki Helps Kids

Here's a wonderful article on Reiki (hands-on) healing with kids by Pamela Miles, author of "Reiki: A Comprehensive Guide." An excerpt: "Lucky teens in Camden, Maine, have found Reiki at...Camden Hills Regional High School. According to Judy Ottman, M.Ed., the...

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Wednesday January 17, 2007

You Can Look Good at the Hospital

Huge thanks to Oprah's O magazine for alerting me to the existence of these nice looking pants and jackets to wear during hospital stays, or medical treatments. The Original Healing Threads company was founded by three sisters, two of whom...

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Wednesday January 17, 2007

Angelina Jolie Undresses Vogue

Vogue magazine flew Annie Leibovitz, Angelina Jolie, and a fashion photo crew of 50 into the dry, tawny desert (somewhere between Los Angeles and Las Vegas), but sparks flew when stylists showed Jolie all the sleek, fancy, clothes they'd pulled...

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Wednesday January 17, 2007

Totally Healthy Roasted Beets

I'm snacking on roasted, sliced beets as we speak, and... there's nothing better. Nothing to them, either. I did peel them while they were raw this time (I had one bunch of red beets, one bunch golden). Then I sliced...

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Tuesday January 16, 2007

What Yoga Does, Where Yoga Leads

Thanks to friend and reader, yoga teacher Frances Stahnke for posting this last Friday:"My favorite definition of Yoga is that which enables one to attain what was previously unattainable. Yoga is the science of realization; you are the scientist, the...

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Tuesday January 16, 2007

No Birth, No Death, Just Spirit

"Never the Spirit was born, the Spirit shall cease to be never. Never was time it was not, end and beginning are dreams. Birthless and deathless and changeless remaineth the Spirit forever."--Bhagavad Gita...

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Monday January 15, 2007

A Swami's Saga Celebrates Its 60th Birthday

Swami Yogananda's famous "Autobiography of a Yogi" has passed its 60th year in print. Originally published in 1945 and then revised in 1951, the famous narrative of a guru's life and times includes this great Indian teacher's descriptions of his...

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Sunday January 14, 2007

Yogananda Video on 'How to Sleep'

YouTube.com isn't the exclusive realm of wacky home videos made by suburban boys in their teens and early twenties. Here's a vintage black-and-white film snippet of Swami Yogananda in which he lectures Westerners on how to go to sleep....

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Saturday January 13, 2007

Yogananda's Prayer for World Peace

Heavenly Father, bless the nations of the earth, our own large family, that all may realize their eternal kinship as Thy children. Thou art our one spiritual Father, the Beloved of the Universe and the Beloved of our hearts. May...

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Friday January 12, 2007

MLK Jr.'s Early Religious Memories

This is fascinating. I've never read it before. In 1950, Martin Luther King took a course called "The Religious Development of Personality," and wrote an autobiographical work about the various religious stages of his own early life. The professor marked...

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Friday January 12, 2007

Portraits of Prayer from the 15th Century

I did not make it to this National Gallery Show when I was in Washington D.C., but I surely wish I had. These exquisite Dutch-school partnered paintings are called diptychs, and they consist of two small, hinged panels: A portrait...

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Thursday January 11, 2007

Our Inner Cosmos as Art

For years Alex Grey's visionary artwork portraying the body's interior, auras, and energetic systems has inspired countless artists, seekers, and decors. Now you can get a more personalized version of the human imprint in these colorful, custom-made art pieces from...

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Thursday January 11, 2007

Can You See Things Others Don't?

I love the way a reader named Aciana described her world as she "sees" it. She writes: "What I 'see' are vibrations that form outward from objects. Sometimes just in the air. Since everything "vibrates," the sights I see differ...

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Thursday January 11, 2007

The Yee-Saidman Wedding

What happens when two happily-married yoga practicioners with children fall in love? This....

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Wednesday January 10, 2007

New, New World Order

Oneness--of one kind or another--is coming this way. Here's what scientists now say the world will look like in 250 million years: They call it Pangea Ultima. These continental shifts and collisions are occurring at a rate "slower than the...

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Wednesday January 10, 2007

Ram Dass Beholds His Own Abundance

Sticking with the subject of money, click here to see a filmed conversation about poverty and prosperity between spiritual teachers Ram Dass and Wayne Dyer on Ram Dass's new, beautifully produced website, RamDass.org. Ram Dass, as you no doubt know,...

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Wednesday January 10, 2007

Objections to Prosperity Gospels

A few readers object to Christian prosperity gospels and the preached belief that "God wants you rich." "I'm all for prosperity," writes steady CM reader Stacey-Robin, "but in a more holistic fashion. Be grateful for what you have and practice...

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Tuesday January 9, 2007

Total Health, the New Hemingway Style

I'm impressed with what I've read in Mariel Hemingway's new book "Healthy Living from the Inside Out: Every Woman's Guide to Real Beauty, Renewed Energy, and a Radiant Life." This seems a cut above the exercise/diet bibles by other personalities....

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Monday January 8, 2007

Are You on Top of Your Money?

Do you ever find dimes in your jewelry box, pocket change piled on your dresser, or damp dollar bills crumpled in the washing machine? This weekend, I walked around the house gathering all the bits of abandoned U.S. currency I...

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Monday January 8, 2007

A Prayer for Fearlessness

May the roots of suffering diminish. May warfare, violence, neglect, indifference, and addictions also decrease.May the wisdom and compassion of all beings increase, now and in the future.May we clearly see all the barriers we erect between ourselves and others...

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Friday January 5, 2007

The Atlantic Monthly's Twist on Yoga

I've been sitting on my feelings about The Atlantic Monthly's take on trendy yoga culture for a couple of days now. The piece is not available online without a subscription, but here's a chat about today's yoga scene with author...

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Friday January 5, 2007

Readers' Exchanges with Dead Loved Ones

Readers sent in such interesting descriptions of their energetic exchanges with deceased loved ones that I'll just run them here. "The night that my beloved grandmother died in 1993," writes CM reader Nancy, "I left the hospital and went to...

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Thursday January 4, 2007

Take This Spiritual Parenting Survey

Today Beliefnet launched a survey for parents on what it’s like to raise kids with religious and/or spiritual values.This quiz was composed in partnership with Parents magazine for an upcoming article on spiritual parenting. Click that link and complete the...

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Wednesday January 3, 2007

Chattering Mind's 1000th Blog Post

"Place your burdenat the feet of the Lord of the Universewho accomplishes everything.Remain all the time steadfast in the heart,in the Transcendental Absolute.God knows the past, present, and futureHe will determine the future for youand accomplish the workWhat is to...

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Wednesday January 3, 2007

The Uplifting Trajectory of Human History

Hey guys, you're going to love Jeff Martinhauk, a liberal Christian blogger and seminarian I discovered while Googling around last night. Martinhauk's blog is called "Leaning Towards Justice," and he writes on all manner of religious and spiritual topics with...

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Wednesday January 3, 2007

How Far Would You Go for a Stranger in Need?

This week a 50-year-old construction worker and Navy veteran named Wesley Autrey saved a man who had fallen onto the New York subway tracks by leaping onto the tracks himself and pressing the fallen stranger down into the one foot...

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Wednesday January 3, 2007

Living With a Synesthete

Our 10-year-old Chattering son appears to be a synesthete, which in his case means that he "sees" letters in color and perceives the taste of foods on a "mental" grid or graph. A fair share of famous artists and composers...

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Tuesday January 2, 2007

Accepting Your Sweet Self: How to Maintain New Year's Resolutions

We spent our New Year's Eve with old friends (with a new baby) in Washington D.C., a city filled with so many memories since I lived in it eighteen years. We showed our own kids our old haunts, visited the...

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Monday January 1, 2007

Out with the Old, In with the New

A reader calling herself Gramma writes: "My clutter consists of piles of old magazines and newspaper clippings about important subjects: politics; religion; history; civil rights movement; black history; women's history; sociology; etc. After I got rid of about half of...

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About Chattering Mind

The last update to the Chattering Mind blog was in July 2007. We welcome your comments about Holistic Spirituality in our Spirituality & Practice forums.

Chattering Mind is a blog on motherhood, aging, health and healing, yoga, whole foods, spiritual music, meditation, as well as the struggle to manage time and clutter.

Read more about writer Amy Cunningham.

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