"Your melanin of course ... that's your space suit. You're Caucasian - you got melanin - it's in your brain. Don't let 'em trick you... you're gonna learn how to be a cosmonaut and travel to different planets in your natal chart. Access the different constellations through your body... You can access Taurus through your body, through your natal chart." ~ Rasheem Imhotep - 6:03


 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by P9 (@special____project)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by P9 (@special____project)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by P9 (@special____project)


✓ 3 years ago

Intuition Ft. Steven Spielberg (Original Mix) (2021)

I look to history not to be didactic, ‘cause that’s just a bonus, but I look because the past is filled with the greatest stories that have ever been told. Heroes and villains are not literary constructs, but they’re at the heart of all history.

And again, this is why it’s so important to listen to your internal whisper. It’s the same one that compelled Abraham Lincoln and Oskar Schindler to make the correct moral choices. In your defining moments, do not let your morals be swayed by convenience or expediency. Sticking to your character requires a lot of courage. And to be courageous, you’re going to need a lot of support.

- Steven Spielberg, Harvard University 2016 Commencement address, transcript


✓ 3 years ago

When racism is real, one should be aware of it to avoid danger and also find new opportunities – but I think it should be framed differently to make it less real long-term.

By this, condemning racism is only a stop-gap measure in transcending the problem of disunity because if the condemnation doesn’t work, then what? Banish the racists, get violent with them, join with them? It’s still disunity.

Perhaps it’s even hypocritical to condemn someone who is condemning someone else. Condemnation in one’s mind is the problem with racism being just a derivative of it.

So what are the options?

Look for new language —
In one respect one can condemn “racism” but to condemn its synonyms mentioned here ie skin-centricity, color-bias, third-eye blindness, anti-fam seems wrong. It’s not about winning the fight, it’s about transcending the fight, and those new words should negate the fight associated with the R-word.

See “condemnation” as an illusion —

The Seventh Illusion, the Illusion of Condemnation, may be used to experience the fact that you are deserving of nothing but praise. This is something that you cannot fathom, for you live so deeply within your Illusion of Condemnation.

If, however, you lived within the heart of praise every moment, you could not experience it. Praise would mean nothing to you. You would not know what it was.

The glory of praise is lost when praise is all there is. Yet you have taken this awareness to an extreme, taking the illusion of imperfection and Condemnation to new levels, where you now actually believe praise to be wrong — especially self-praise. You are not to praise yourself, or to notice (much less announce) the glory of Who You Are. And you must be sparing in your praise of others. Praise, you have concluded, is not good.

The Illusion of Condemnation is also your announcement that you, and God, can be damaged. Exactly the opposite is true, of course, but you cannot know this truth, nor experience it, in the absence of any other reality. And so, you have created an alternate reality in which damage is possible, and Condemnation is proof of it.

Neale D. Walsch, 2000, page 59

Aim a crystal point at the third-eye —

It sounds silly, but to see the world (and people) differently may require a different sense organ to be used. Furthermore, consciousness travels and it may even help create the new community people feel is lacking. The third eye not only detects light – I think it projects it too.

Ignore victimhood (but not victims) and seek enlightenment and justice —

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Amblin (@amblin)

So now what?




✓ 3 years ago



✓ 3 years ago

Israel Weissbrem, whose complex themes were taken from the lives of educated and wealthy Jews of Eastern Europe at the end of the nineteenth century, and whose writings all but disappeared in the twentieth, wrote in a vein of melodrama and fantasy, with an ironic and frequently savage wit.

Amazon

* Israel Weissbrem - my great-great grandfather. See family tree below constructed in mid-70's by Leon Weisbrem.

src: instagram.com/alessandro_michele (December, 2020) >>

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by ® (@nigo)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by P9 (@special____project)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Sky Ferreira (@skyferreira)

pics
icons8.com/photos/photo/lifestyle--5d7625a28b65880001c9ee9b
icons8.com/photos/photo/lifestyle--5d7625408b65880001c9ee4e
icons8.com/photos/photo/lifestyle--5c7be04b8b658800017c5b19
icons8.com/photos/photo/leisure--5b3fe2fb8b658800016baee3

✓ 2 years ago

dilushselva – UHOH // life is good (2020)

Lucas was born and raised in Modesto, Calif., obsessed with cars and racing, and wanted to pursue a career in that area. On June 12, 1962, just as he was graduating from Thomas Downey High School, his Fiat was hit by another car; Lucas was thrown out of the car when his seat belt snapped. The Fiat crashed into a tree and if he had remained inside he almost certainly would have died. It was a wakeup call. Instead of devoting his life to cars, he enrolled in Modesto Junior College and then film school.

source

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Justin Bieber (@justinbieber)


pics
pngio.com/images/png-a280913.html
✓ 3 years ago