 |
|
 |
Dream Dictionary Control | A Wisdom Archive on Dream Dictionary Control |  | Dream Dictionary Control A selection of articles related to Dream Dictionary Control |  |
| We recommend this article: Dream Dictionary Control - 1, and also this: Dream Dictionary Control - 2. |
 | | Dream Dictionary Control |  | | | Top | » Page 4 « Page 5 Page 6 |  |
 | |
| ARTICLES RELATED TO Dream Dictionary Control | |  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control: Meaning of Dream from; Dagger to Dead / DeathMeaning of dream including the meaning of
dreams about: Dagger,
Dahlia, Dairy, Daisy, Damask Rose, Damson, Dance, Dancing Master, Dandelion,
Danger, Dark, Dates, Daughter, Daughter-in-law, David, Day, Daybreak, Dead,
Death, Debt, December, Deck, Decorate, Deed, Deer, Delay,
For more dream
interpretation, see: Meaning of Dreams or Dream Dictionary
For articles about
dreams, see: Dreams
Read more here: » Meaning of a Dream: Meaning of Dream from; Dagger to Dead / Death |
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
New Age
Spirituality Dictionary on Chi
Chi (Chinese, "ether," "matter-energy," "vital energy," "material force") An important and multifaceted term in Chinese religion, philosophy, and science, the root meaning of which is "moist vapor" or "breath. " - Early Chinese teachers spoke of chi as a vital spirit or energy that animated living beings. As such, it had to be properly nourished.
- For Confucians, that required moral cultivation so that one's chi, undistracted by external things, would conform to the dictates of will.
- For Taoists, it required mastery of the self through meditation, breath control, diet, yoga, and other techniques so as to harmonize one's chi with the material force of the universe ordered by the Tao (undifferentiated unity).
Traditional Chinese medicine attributed illnesses primarily to imbalances in the chi that pulsed through the body. Acupuncture, moxibustion (placing burning cones made of the dried leaves of the Artemisia moxa plant on the patient's skin), and other techniques helped to restore its balanced circulation. Chi was also an important concept in the correlative philosophy that blossomed in the early Han dynasty (206 BC-AD 8) systematizing the correspondences between like things that explained their mutual interactions. In the Neo-Confucian metaphysics of the Northern and Southern Sung dynasties (960-1279), all phenomena were said to be manifest through the intrinsic relation of principle (li) and material force (chi). Li constituted the essential, unchanging, perfect nature of all things, while chi represented their corporeal, transitory, and potentially flawed aspect. Individuals were instructed to perfect their humanity, to purify and harmonize their chi with their true Heavenendowed nature through the external investigation of things and mental introspection. Also Ki.
(See
also: Chi ,
New Age Spirituality, Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
| | |  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
Parapsychology
Dictionary on Control
Control:
(a) In experimental parapsychology a procedure undertaken in order to ensure that the experiment is conducted in a standard fashion and so that results are not unduly influenced by extraneous factors. See also Control Group , Artifact. (b) In spiritualism, a discarnate entity who communicates with a trance medium and who generally controls the trance state.
(See also: Control , Psychic, Psychic Dictionary,
Parapsychology, Parapsychology Dictionary)
|
|  |
| |  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Monk
monk: A celibate man wholly dedicated to religious life, either cenobitic (residing with others in a monastery) or anchoritic (living alone, as a hermit or mendicant). Literally, "one who lives alone" (from the Greek monos, "alone"). Through the practice of yoga, the control and transmutation of the masculine and feminine forces within himself, the monk is a complete being, free to follow the contemplative and mystic life toward realization of the Self within. Benevolent and strong, courageous, fearless, not entangled in the thoughts and feelings of others, monks are affectionately detached from society, defenders of the faith, kind, loving and ever-flowing with timely wisdom. A synonym for monastic. Its feminine counterpart is nunk. See: monastic, sannyasin, nunk.
(See
also: Monk ,
Hinduism,
Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Grape Cure
Grape Cure (grape diet): Mono-diet advanced by Johanna Brandt, N.D., Ph.N., author of The Grape Cure ((c) 1928). The front matter of the 1967 edition, a paperback published by Benedict Lust Publications, quotes the author: My discovery of the Grape diet is the direct result of Divine Illumination. The grape diet consists of grapes or grape juice. Brandt held that the mind operated through magnetism and that the Grape Cure contributed to the purification and buildup of magnetism. She recommended it for appendicitis, cancer, diabetes, gout, pyorrhea, rheumatism, scurvy, sex problems, tuberculosis, unnatural cravings (as for alcoholic beverages, coffee, tea, and tobacco), and other conditions. Under the heading Sex Problems, she stated: By the magical purification of the blood the nerves are stabilized, self-control is established and our God-given heritage of sense and desire is transmitted into divine creative power.
(See
also: Grape Cure ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control: Dream WorksIn the stillness of the night, when not a sound breaks the hushed silence, they timorously creep into your mind. Fragile, flittering forms—often more real than reality—seek you out from the deepest abyss of your soul and open for you a vista of visions—nonsensical, terrifying, fantastic—and sometimes, just sometimes, hauntingly beautiful. You wake up with a lump in your throat that threatens to cascade down your eyes, a lingering nostalgia for something near, yet eternity away. But weren't you closer to believing, even then, that somewhere, all that you saw was real; that, beyond the tangible truth of ticking time, you had lived one moment of timeless infinity? Perhaps that's the secret. The chance to glimpse beyond. Why else should we take a dream, those phantasms of the chaotic unconscious, so seriously? Read more here: » Meaning of Dreams: Dream Works |
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control: Dreams Interpretation from; Diving to DrinkingDreams
Interpretation including the meaning of dreams about: Ditch, Dividend, Diving, Divining Rods,
Divorce, Docks, Doctor, Dogs, Dolphin, Dome, Dominoes, Donkey, Doomsday, Door,
Door Bell, Doves, Dowry, Dragon, Drama, Dram-drinking, Draw-knife, Dressing,
Drinking, Driving, Dromedary.
Dream Dictionary Index
including links to 10.000 dream interpretations: Dream Dictionary Index
For more dream
interpretation, see: Meaning of Dreams or Dream Dictionary
For articles about
dreams, see: Dreams
Read more here: » Dreams Interpretation: Dreams Interpretation from; Diving to Drinking |
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
New Age Spirituality
Dictionary on
Meditation
Meditation A technique of mind control that leads to inner feelings of calm and peacefulness and may result in experiences of transcendental awareness and self-realization. The two main types of meditation are (1) the focusing type, similar to self-hypnosis, in which the meditator focuses on a repetitive sound or chant, an image, or pattern of breathing; (2) the "opening-up" type which emphasizes the detached observation of mental events as they occur.
(See also: Meditation , New Age
Spirituality, Body
Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Fate
fate: From the Latin fatum, "prophetic declaration, oracle." In Western thought, fate is the force or agency, God or other power, outside man's control, believed to determine the course of events before they occur. According to Hindu thought, man is not ruled by fate but shapes his own destiny by his actions, which have their concomitant reactions. The Hindu view acknowledges fate only in the limited sense that man is subject to his own past karmas, which are a driving force in each incarnation, seemingly out of his own control. But they can be mitigated by how he lives life, meaning how he faces and manages his prarabdha ("begun, undertaken") karmas and his kriyamana ("being made") karmas. See: adrishta, karma, destiny.
(See
also: Fate ,
Hinduism,
Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
Theosophy
Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Aura
A
Theosophical definition of Aura :
Aura An extremely subtle and therefore invisible essence or fluid that emanates from and surrounds not only human beings and beasts, but as a matter of fact plants and minerals also. The aura is one of the aspects of the auric egg and therefore the human aura partakes of all the qualities that the human constitution contains. It is at once magneto-mental and electrovital, suffused with the energies of mind and spirit - the quality in each case coming from an organ or center of the human constitution whence it flows. The aura is the source of the sympathies and antipathies that we are conscious of. Under the control of the human will the aura can be both life-giving and healing, or death-dealing; and when the human will is passive the aura has an action of its own which is automatic and follows the laws of character and latent impulses of the being from whom it emanates. Sensitives have frequently described the aura in more or less vague terms as a light flowing from the eyes or the heart or the tips of the fingers or from other parts of the body. Sometimes this fluid, instead of being colorless light, manifests itself by flashing and scintillating changes of color - the color or colors in each case depending not only upon the varying moods of the human individual, but also possessing a background equivalent to the character or nature of the individual. Animals are extremely sensitive to auras, and some beasts even descry the human being surrounded with the aura as with a cloud or veil. In fact, everything has its aura surrounding it with a light or play of color, and especially is this the case with so-called animated beings. The essential nature of the aura usually seen is astral and electrovital. The magnificent phenomena of radiation that astronomers can discern at times of eclipse, long streamers with rosy and other colored light flashing forth from the body of the sun, are not flames nor anything of the sort, but are simply the electrovital aura of the solar body - a manifestation of solar vitality, for the sun in occultism is a living being, as indeed everything else is.
See
also: Aura ,
Mysticism,
Body Mind and Soul
|
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
Sai Baba Dictionary on Siddhis (8 perfections)
Siddhis:
Siddhis (8 perfections): anima: smallness, mahima: greatness, garima: weight, laghima: lightness, prapti: free access, prakamya: doing at wish, vasitva: control over the elements and isvara: lordship over all (SB 3:15-45) Siddhis: spiritual accomplishments that can be a hindrance in ones selfrealization: the ability to identify with the smallest (anima), the biggest (mahima), the heaviest (garima) and the lightest (laghima) and that one acting in ones own way (Prakamaya) finding access everywhere (prapti) and controlling the elements (vashitva) is able to control everything (isatva), (see also and S.B. 5.6: 1 about their being limitations, or S.B.: 9.4: 24-25 for them being of no interest to the devotees).
(See
also: Siddhis , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit
Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Sexuality
sexuality: Hinduism has a healthy, unrepressed outlook on human sexuality, and sexual pleasure is part of kama, one of the four goals of life. On matters such as birth control, sterilization, masturbation, homosexuality, bisexuality, petting and polygamy, Hindu scripture is tolerantly silent, neither calling them sins nor encouraging their practice, neither condemning nor condoning. The two important exceptions to this understanding view of sexual experience are adultery and abortion, both of which are considered to carry heavy karmic implications for this and future births. See: abortion, bisexuality, homosexuality.
(See
also: Sexuality ,
Hinduism,
Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Mayura
mayura: (Sanskrit) "Peacock." The vahana, or mount, of Lord Karttikeya, symbolizing effulgent beauty and religion in full glory. The peacock is able to control powerful snakes, such as the cobra, symbolizing the soulful domination of the instinctive elements - or control of the kundalini, which is yoga. See: Karttikeya, vahana.
(See
also: Mayura ,
Hinduism,
Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
| |  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control:
New Age
Spirituality Dictionary on Reformation
Reformation The 16th century movement initiated by Martin Luther, initially intended to correct, protest, or reform the doctrines and practices of Roman Catholicism. Luther's efforts (later joined and expanded by Zwingli, Bucer, Calvin and others) quickly developed into a complete break with Catholicism. The reformers' major doctrinal issues included a rejection of the Pope, church control of Bible translation and interpretation, a distinction in value between laity and clergy, and salvation being a product of the church and its sacraments (salvation by works). A more thorough (and in some cases unorthodox) reform occurred with the Radical Reformation - the orthodox Anabaptist movement being an example. To various degrees, virtually all Protestant denominations today share a common heritage concerning the issues of the Reformation.
(See
also: Reformation ,
New Age Spirituality, Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
| |  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Control: Holistic
Health Dictionary on
TAI CHI
TAI CHI Tai Chi (pronounced tie-chee) emphasizes complete relaxation, and is essentially a form of mediation, or what has been called "meditation in motion." Unlike the hard martial arts, Tai Chi is characterized by soft, slow, flowing movements that emphasize force, rather than brute strength. Though it is soft, slow, and flowing, the movements are executed precisely. Tai Chi history is not well documented; however, aspects of it date back at least 2000 years B.C. in ancient India. In the 13th century A.D., a Taoist (pronounced DOW-ist) monk, Chang Sang Feng, developed what is known as Tai Chi. Then Tai Chi came to be associated with different families in China, and each family’s name designated a different style of Tai Chi. The Chen family developed the Tai Chi style upon which all other modern styles are based. A man by the name of Yang, who studied with the Chen family, later modified the Chen style, thus developing the Yang style of Tai Chi Chuan. The Yang style is the most common traditional style of Tai Chi Chuan practiced today. The Yang style has three different forms that are practiced: Simplified form, short form, and long form. Chi is an ancient Chinese concept that designates a form of energy. The term literally means "breath," as does the ancient Greek word from which we get the word "spirit." According to the philosophy of Tai Chi, this energy, which flows throughout every body, can become blocked. Tai Chi philosophy states that illness is due to the flow of the chi through the body becoming blocked. The Chinese recognize several means for freeing up the flow of chi. Two of the more commonly known forms in this country are acupuncture and Tai Chi. Tai Chi, as also used as form of meditation to develop self-understanding. Learning to control oneself enables one to deal with others. This self-control can come about through two principal notions found in the Tao Te Ching (pronounced DOW tay ching) and I Ching (pronounced EE- ching). These two notions are the fundamental concepts of yin and yang. The philosophy of Taoism (DOW-ism) understands everything in terms of these two opposing principles. Though these two principles are seen as opposites, the one necessarily merges into the other, creating the natural balance of self and world, hence the classic symbol of Tai Chi . The Tai Chi form is meant to enable one to bring the principles of yin and yang back into their fundamental, natural harmony. The ultimate effect of this harmony, according to Taoism and Tai Chi, is one's physical and spiritual well-being.
(See also: TAI CHI ,
Alternative Health, Holistic
Health, Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
| |  | | | Top | » Page 4 « Page 5 Page 6 |  |
 | |
|
|