Showing posts with label fortuna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fortuna. Show all posts

Thursday, October 17, 2024

The Tao of Intuitive Luck


“Filled with sage advice backed by sound scientific evidence, The Tao of Intuitive Luck is a carefully crafted prescription for cultivating genuine luck anytime. Highly recommended as a practical guide to putting your intuition to work.”
–Chief Scientist Dr. Dean Radin, Ph.D., Institute of Noetic Sciences and author of Real Magic and The Conscious Universe.

Randall Fitzgerald (like Dr. Gallenberger and Dr. Radin) studies "luck." We think it's "chance" and random, but these three researchers demonstrate that it is completely something else going unnoticed: attitude, outlook, expectation, gratitude, positivity, our internal states manifesting externally.
Fitzgerald is the author of The Tao of Intuitive Luck. For two free audio downloads on luck techniques, click here. The Tao of Intuitive Luck

Every day we pull the lever of chance on our finances, our safety, our health and relationships. Why are some people more skilled at managing these risks? What makes them so lucky? 

Randall Fitzgerald’s investigative articles have been featured in The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal, and Reader's Digest, where he spent two decades as a roving editor. In addition to having authored 10 books translated into a dozen languages, he founded and co-edited Second Look, a seminal magazine chronicling the search for other intelligent life in the universe, the origins of civilization, and the nature of consciousness. He has appeared on ABC’s The View and hundreds of other TV and radio shows, including four appearances on Coast-to-Coast with G-Man Noory. thetaoofintuitiveluck.com

The Tao of Intuitive Luck: Winning at Games of Chance & the Game of Life
(Kindle Edition) Author Randall Fitzgerald has 5.0 out of 5 stars with 13 ratings of this book.

Every day we pull the lever of chance on our finances, our safety, our health, and relationships. Why are some people more skilled at managing these risks? What makes them so lucky?

The secret of lucky people comes from their mastery of Intuitive Luck. “The only time I’ve made mistakes is when I didn’t listen to my intuition,” admitted billionaire Oprah Winfrey.

“If you can have any superpower, luck is the one you’d want,” observed billionaire Elon Musk. By combining these two powerful forces — intuition and luck — you create a pathway (the Tao) to good fortune.

Whether one plays casino games of chance, bets on sports or the lottery, invests in stocks, or just plays the game of life, intuitive luck is a prescription that can be mastered to navigate life’s risks and attract financial rewards.

By using The Tao of Intuitive Luck formula for luck enhancement, Lady Luck will become a more frequent and dependable partner.

Five Intuitive Luck factors reveal a practical, teachable, science-based synergy for attracting streaks of luck.

Investigative journalist Randall Fitzgerald spent several decades documenting intuitive luck techniques practiced by genuinely lucky people and interviewing scientists at the forefront of intuition research.

His expertise earned him the role as the media master of ceremonies for the televised 100th anniversary celebration of the founding of Las Vegas. More: Tao of Intuitive Luck: Winning Chance eBook
  • Coast to Coast, 10/17/24; Pat Macpherson, Seth Auberon, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Gregg Braden: strange things at end of time


Feel like time is speeding up? There's an unexpected reason

Researcher Gregg Braden
(OurTimelessWisdom) Feel like time is speeding up, like a calm stream is turning into a raging river? It's leaving everyone wondering why.

Discover the unexpected reasons behind this sensation and what it means. Join OTW to delve into ancient shamanic prophecies, Hopi Prophecy Rock, and Hermetic principles to understand the cosmic influences accelerating our perception of time.

Gregg Braden’s insights reveal how these changes impact consciousness and our daily lives, urging us to embrace community, inner strength, and conscious adaptation.

πŸ” What is there to learn
  • The Wisdom Codes
    The ancient map of time and its relevance today
  • Shamanic and Hopi prophecies on time acceleration
  • Hermetic principles of correspondence, vibration, and rhythm
  • Strategies to navigate the turbulent times with inner calm and elevated consciousness
  • The significance of community and mutual support
🌟Key themes
  • Ancient wisdom and prophecies
  • Consciousness expansion and spiritual awakening
  • The laws of the universe and Hermetic principles
  • Community, support, and inner strength
πŸ“š Dive more deeply
  • Gregg Braden's profound insights and research
  • Learn more about Gregg Braden
  • Explore the Hermetic principles and their relevance to modern life
  • Understanding the Hopi Prophecy Rock and its significance
πŸ”” Join Timeless Wisdom Community: Find the secrets of time acceleration and ancient wisdom. Hit the notification bell, subscribe, and be part of an ever-growing community dedicated to elevating consciousness and thriving in these transformative times.

Subscribe to @OurTimelessWisdom for more insights into ancient knowledge, sacred geometry, quantum physics, and the teachings of luminaries like Neville Goddard, Carl Jung, and Manly P. Hall. 

🌟 ABOUT: Welcome to @OurTimelessWisdom, a portal to the profound depths of ancient knowledge and the expansive realms of consciousness through mastery of the universe's laws. These teachings resurrect sacred wisdom, reawakening a connection to this profound heritage. We traverse a broad spectrum from the intricate patterns of sacred geometry and the enigmatic principles of quantum physics to the venerable teachings of the Sumerians, Thoth, and Hermes Trismegistus. Join a journey through a rich tapestry of interconnected ideas that span across millennia.

πŸ“±Stay connected: Check out Etsy Shop ourtimelesswisdom.etsy.com ☕ Support Truth. πŸ™ buymeacoffee.com/ourtimelesswisdom @Ourtimelesswisdom on YouTube @ourtimelesswisdom Say Hi on 𝕏: twitter.com/OurTimelssWisdm

❓Experienced time speeding up in life? Share thoughts in the comments below. #TimeAcceleration #GreggBraden #HopiProphecy #HermeticPrinciples #Consciousness #Spirituality #CommunitySupport #InnerStrength #Transformation #AncientWisdom #QuantumPhysics #SacredGeometry #NevilleGoddard #CarlJung #ManlyPHall #SpiritualAwakening #UniversalLaws
  • OurTimelessWisdom, June 11, 2024: Pat Macpherson, Dhr. Seven, Xochitl (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

As in the days of Noah... (video)

Jeremiah Cohen, 11/29/18; Sheldon S., Seth Auberon, Crystal Q. (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Jolting: As Were The Days of Noah
This video tries to show who runs our world, not in some metaphorical way but, rather, quite literally who runs it. Ultimately the God (father, son, holy spirit) [non-biblical "Trinity"] is in charge [but seems to be off-duty or in temporary nonintervention mode], but Satan has a leash (according to the Book of Job). We are currently in a very dark period of human history, and the Christians demand that you pick a side. You don't want to be on the fence [actually, we do, looking all around] or oblivious as we move through history.

Catholic priest beats kids for God
(James Munder) Catholic priest hits child at baptism. Molestation far off?

Christian fanatic and researcher Steve Quayle explains that "as in the days of Noah" is Christian code for "helter-skelter," that is, "when the s--t hits the fan." It's time for rapture and a Second Coming.

Strange News Headlines
(stevequayle.com)

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Buddhist multi-millionaire: poor then rich again

Dhr. Seven and Amber Larson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly; Hellmuth Hecker, Anathapindika: The Great Benefactor, Part II, "As A Wealthy Patron" (Lives of the Great Disciples Series)
The noble disciples with the Buddha at their head (Thai-on/flickr.com)
 
PROLOGUE
"Thus have I heard. One time the Blessed One was staying in the city of Savatthi at Jeta's Grove, in Anathapindika's Monastery..."

Many of the Buddha's sutras begin with these words, so the name of that great lay devotee and multimillionaire, Anathapindika, is well known. His name was Sudatta, a stream enterer, whose honorific nickname means: "One who gives alms (pinda) to the unprotected (a-natha)."
 
Who was he? How did he meet the Buddha? What was his relationship to the Dharma? The answers to these questions may be found in the many references to him in the traditional discourses.

SUTRA
Buying land with gold to gift to the Buddha
Even the wealth of the Buddhist multimillionaire Anathapindika (the merchant, trader, banker, or "best," see setthi*) was not inexhaustible.

One day treasures worth 18 million gold pieces were swept away by a flash flood and washed into the sea. Moreover, Anathapindika had loaned nearly the same amount of money to business friends, who had failed to repay him. He was reluctant, however, to ask for the money.

Because his fortune amounted to about five times 18 million, and he had already spent three-fifths of it for the famous forest monastery he donated to the Buddha and Buddha's wandering ascetics, his money had now nearly run out. Anathapindika had become poor.

Nevertheless, he continued to provide food for the mendicants nuns and monks as well as the needy and defenseless, although it was only a modest serving of thin rice gruel.

At that time a spirit lived in his seven-storied mansion, above the gate-tower. Whenever the Buddha or a noble (enlightened) disciple entered the house, the spirit, following the laws of its realm, was obliged to step down from its place in order to honor the Great Ones. However, this was very inconvenient for the spirit. Annoyed, he tried to think of a way to keep noble ones out away from the house.

He appeared to a servant and suggested the residence stop offering alms. But the servant paid no attention to these urgings. Then the spirit tried to turn the son of the house against the monastics, but this also failed.

Finally, the spirit appeared in the supernatural aura to the householder himself and tried to persuade Anathapindika to stop the giving of alms given that he was now impoverished. However, Anathapindika, who was a stream enterer, explained that he recognized only three treasures: the Buddha, the Enlightened Teacher, the Dharma, the Teaching that leads to Enlightenment, and the Sangha, the Community of Noble Disciples [that runs the gamut from lay disciples who are stream enterers or those destined for stream entry to ordained arhats].
 
Sculpture of his donation (British Library)
Anathapindika was looking after these treasures and told the spirit to leave his house as there was no place in it for adversaries of the noble ones with the Buddha as their head.

Thereupon, the spirit, following the laws of his realm, had to abandon that place. He betook himself to the deity who was the divine protector of the city of Savatthi and requested an assignment to a new shelter. But it was instead referred to a higher court, that of the Four Great Sky Kings (corresponding to the Four Cardinal Directions).

However, these four also did not feel qualified to make judge where the noble ones were concerned and sent the homeless spirit [up one plane of existence] to Sakka, King of the Devas.

In the meantime, the spirit had become aware of its grave misconduct and asked Sakka to seek forgiveness on his behalf. The king of the devas required that as a penance the spirit help Anathapindika regain his fortune.
 
First of all, the spirit had to retrieve the sunken gold that had washed into the sea; moreover, he had to procure unclaimed buried treasure, and finally he had to persuade Anathapindika's ungrateful debtors to repay their debts.

With a great deal of effort, the spirit fulfilled these tasks. In doing so, he appeared to the debtors in dreams to demand repayment. Soon after Anathapindika regained 54 million and was again able to be as generous as before.
 
The Buddha -- noble, awakened, and free -- helped all who came in contact with him, whether human, deva, or spirit. Such was his loving-kindness and wisdom (Hanuman/flickr.com).
 
The spirit appeared before the Enlightened One and asked his pardon for his malevolent misbehavior, motivated by its annoyance. He was forgiven, and after the Buddha explained the Dharma to him, he became a disciple.

The Enlightened One taught him, moreover, that a person who strives for perfection in giving could not be kept from it by anything in the world, neither by bad nor good fairies, not devas, not yakkhas, nor threat of death (Jataka 140; Jataka 340).

After Anathapindika regain his wealthy and status, a Brahmin became jealous of his good fortune and decided to steal from him what, in his opinion, had made him so wealthy. He wanted to abduct the manifestation of SirΔ« (Sri), the Goddess of Fortune, because he thought that then fortune would leave Anathapindika and come to him.

He could then force her to do his bidding. This strange perception was based on the idea that so called favors of fate, while a [karmic] reward for earlier meritorious deeds, are nevertheless dispensed by devas/deities), who force them to dwell in the beneficiary's house.

So the Brahmin went to Anathapindika's house and looked around to see where the Spirit of Fortune -- the one Americans today refer to, often quite literally, as Lady Luck -- might be found. Like many ancient Indians of his day, he had clairvoyant powers (dibba cakkhu, the "divine eye"), and he saw "Fortune" living in a white cock which was kept in a golden cage in the palace.

He asked the master of the house to give him the cock to awaken his students in the morning. Without hesitation, generous Anathapindika granted the Brahmin his wish. However, just at that moment, "Fortune" wandered into a jewel.

Therefore, the Brahmin also requested the jewel as a present and received it. Then the spirit hid in a staff, a self-defense weapon. After the Brahmin had successfully begged this, the manifestation of Siri settled down on the head of the lady PuΓ±Γ±alakkhana-devi, the first wife of Anathapindika, who was truly the good spirit of the house and therefore had the protection of the devas.
 
Anathapindika visits the Buddha (MBDD)
When the Brahmin saw this, he recoiled in fright: "His wife I cannot request from him!" He confessed his greedy unskillful intentions, returned the gifts and, deeply ashamed, he left the house.

Anathapindika went to the Enlightened One and recounted this strange encounter which he had not understood. The Buddha explained the connection to him -- how the world is changed through skillful works and how, for those with right insight through the purification of virtue, everything is attainable, even nirvana (Jataka 284). More

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Sri Lakshmi in Buddhism, Goddess of Luck

Amol N. Bankar (edited by Wisdom Quarterly)
Lakshmi on a lotus (eaglespace.com)

In Buddhist literature Sri (Siri) or Lakshmi (Lakkhi, possibly related to "lucky") is the goddess of fortune and beauty. "The Questions of King Milinda" (Milindapanha), a later Theravada Buddhist work, mentions her cult and and her followers.

In the Dhammapada Commentary (Atthakatha) she is simply the goddess that gives luck to the kingdom (raja siridayika devata). In the Siri Jataka ("Rebirth Story"), Siri is the personification of Luck.

The rebirth story is told in reference to a brahmin who tried to steal Anathapindika's good fortune (his siri). Lakkhi -- the Pali equivalent of Lakshmi, the goddess of beauty and fortune -- is a name found usually only in later works. The word Lacchi, however, is probably equivalent to Lakkhi.

In the Sirikalakanni Jataka, Siri -- also known as Siri Mata (Mother Siri) -- was the daughter of Dhatarattha, King (or regent) of the Eastern Quarter, one of the Four Great Sky Kings (Catummaharajika). He is chief of the lowly celestial musicians (gandhabbas).

She is identified with Uppalavanna, an extremely beautiful Buddhist nun who was one of the Buddha's two chief female disciples. She is connected with the east, in association with Asa in the South, Saddha in the West, and Hiri in the North.

In the Sarabhanga Jataka Sakka's four daughters are mentioned. Sakka is almost always described as Sakka Devanam Indo, Sakka King (chief) of the Gods (devas). He reigns in the Celestial World of the Thirty-three (Tavatimsa) as well as ruling the Four Great Kings in a subordinate celestial world. His daughters are named Asa, Saddha, Hiri, and Siri.

The Sudhabhojana Jataka recounts a rebirth story when the four daughters went to Anotatta to play in the water. There they saw Narada under a paricchattaka-flower, which he was using as a sunshade. Each asked him for that flower. Narada said he would give it to the best of them then referred them to Sakka. Sakka sent a cup of ambrosia (sudhabhojana) to Kosiya.

He proclaimed that the daughter who succeeded in persuading Kosiya to share his special drink with her would be judged best. After listening to all of their claims, he decided in favor of Hiri.

When Kosiya died and was reborn in Tavatimsa (the second celestial world where Sakka reigns as lord among the devas there). Sakka gave him Hiri to be his wife and also a share of the kingdom.

In Maitribala Jataka we find her association with the lotus. In past lives she was frequently performing meritorious deeds with various buddhas involving blue lotuses, which led to remarkable anomalies related to flowers as her good karma came to fruition in later lives.


Buddhist nun Uppalavanna as Sri Lakshmi on the coins of the Licchavis in Nepal

Sirikalakanni Rebirth Story
The story related in the Sirikalakanni Jataka is that the Bodhisattva (the buddha-to-be) was once a merchant of Benares named Suciparivara ("pure household"). He kept an unused couch and bed for anyone who might come to his house whom he deemed purer than himself.

One day Kalakanni, the daughter of King Virupakka, and Siri, the daughter of King Dhatarattha, went to bathe in Anotatta. A quarrel arose about who should bathe first. As neither any of the Four Great Kings nor Sakka were willing to decide the matter, they referred the two goddesses to Suciparivara.

Lakshmi emerges from a water lotus like the Indian version of the "Birth of Venus."

Kalakanni first appeared before Suciparivara in blue garments and jewels. Being asked to state her qualities, she told him and was then dismissed. Next came Siri, diffusing a yellow radiance. The Bodhisattva, discerning her identity and virtues, welcomed her and offered her his unused couch. Thus, the dispute was settled. The bed used by Siri came to be known as the Sirisaya [possibly referring to a vimana, a platform, palanquin, or spacecraft used by devas, a "UFO" in modern terms], hence the origin of Sirisayana ("royal bed" or "state couch").