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Spirituality and material wealth; some thoughts

Topic: Natural HealthBy Peter RosePublished Recently added

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Many, if not most, of the religions of the world suggest that you need to be poor in order to be “saved”; or that some how, being deprived and poor materially is the way to heaven.
To some extent the definition of religion is going to get involved in any consideration of this suggestion.
Religion can be defined as a set of beliefs codified and administered by an elite group, with rules and punishments for acting against those beliefs. For this article I will use that definition and so religion is not necessary to spirituality.
In the period of time that we live in a person’s material wealth, the financial resources they have control over, is what allows a choice of actions. A rich human may act as though they were poor but a poor person can not act as if they are rich, not for very long anyway. So wealth is necessary for activity that raises spiritual awareness. The internet and web allows the dissemination of ideas at a far lower cost than other mediums, but you still have to have access to a computer, telephone system etc and to get your ideas noticed amongst the tens of millions of other ideas, you need publicity. This can be expensive unless you are very lucky.
An individual my be spiritually enlightened and they may have inspired thoughts that can benefit others, but they have to communicate with those others. Thought forms created by an enlightened individual may be available for others, who are homogenous, to connect to but this reaches only those already homogenous; it does not reach those seeking enlightenment. So material, physical communication is required. This costs money.
In past eras of human existence things moved slower and there were less people and fewer ideas seeking attention. A written statement or later in human development a printed book, could circulate amongst people and over time reach many of those with the willingness to take on the ideas. Now this may still be possible but the explosion in human population and the willingness of organised groups who oppose the ideas being circulated, to disseminate misleading and counter ideas, have made this slow way unsuitable to the times we live in.
This may or may not be a good thing; it is simply a fact of the times we live in.
History is full of examples where rich and powerful people gave patronage to relatively poor people who had talent as artists or ideas that needed expression. In those far off times the rich and powerful acted with a concept of time where generations of descendents were involved not the next years balance sheet. So time has moved on and spirituality has to move with it. The wonderful teachings of Lao Tzu were for his time. They still have relevance to how we should conduct our inner selves, how we should conduct our spiritual, emotional and mental beings, but we can not live our physical lives at the pace of a slow walk when all around us the world moves at the speed of electrons.
This does not mea
I am advocating we give up the slow walk and all rush about without contemplation. It does not mean we should tear up all things regarded as traditional and seek only the new and untested. To me tradition is something that has evolved over time, something that has been developed and adjusted through countless repetitions in order to reach what it is now. The mistake is to think traditions are NOW fixed and so can not further evolve but can only be destroyed. Traditions like ideas and like the earth we live on, are always evolving, always changing always developing, we must evolve with it and our attitudes to spirituality and wealth need to change with the times.
A person with wealth can be spiritual. Spiritual enlightenment does not demand poverty, nor does it demand a controlling elite. It is not a set of rules that have to be enforced. Spiritual enlightenment is freedom; it requires recognition that there are many varied paths to enlightenment and many speeds of progress. No human person can say they know what God wants others to do. God is beyond human understanding, accept that and set yourself free to seek enlightenment by the path most suitable to you. For myself I find that in this period of my life, stillness and silence, mediation with out thought, help me to find com

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About the Author

Bo
16/2/42 Educated at Technical High School and Colleges.
GCE (Maths Physics and English) ONC and NVQ qualifications in engineering and
Management.
Having trained as a technical engineer in electro magnetic motors I then spent many years studying, with the leading teachers of the time, holistic forms of health care. Including Shiatsu and Acupuncture. In the later part of this time I started to investigate the use of magnets as part of health carer
I have treated thousands of patients using this experience and knowledge; I have worked in drug and alcohol abuse and at large private holistic clinics.
I worked in various industrial management roles including costing/ estimating and sales.
1983/4 studied Shiatsu at the East West Centre in London and continued studies with Harold Dull, Waturi Ohashi, Yamomoto etc
1984 to 1986 studied massage/ anatomy/ physiology/ acupuncture and homoeopathy with the Association of Natural Medicines.
1986 and on going started to study the effects of magnetism and energies in the human healing process.
All studies are on going, each treatment teaches a little more, each lecture and each conversation adds to the total stock of knowledge.
Was one of the earliest members of the Shiatsu Society in the UK and a founder member of the Suffolk and North Essex Shiatsu Association.
Organizer of the first East Anglian exhibitions of Natural Mediciner
Co started the Green Lodge Centre for Integrated Medicinesr
Worked for 3 years at the Colchester Open Road drug and alcohol treatment centre the 3rd year as full time therapy co-ordinatorr
Taught Shiatsu at The Colchester Institute (a regional College of Anglian Polytechnic University)
Was an elected director of the Shiatsu Society for 2 years
Manager of Shiatsu International.
Now retired from providing treatments that incorporate Shiatsu, Acupressure, Magnet Therapy, Moxibustion and advice on herbal, flower and homoeopathic remedies.
I have developed an on line course of instruction in magnetic therapyr
Author of books on the I Ching and Magnet Therapy ( The practical guide to magnet
therapy pub Godsfield Press and Magnet healing pub Time Life.) but now concentrating on the “on line magnetic therapy course” and working on other books
www.shiatsu-international.com

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