On Divorce

February 21st, 2012 | Posted by Lunar in Familial Reflections | Relationships | Vedas - (0 Comments)

Today’s date is quite interesting 21-02, 2012 but that’s merely a derailing off topic.

My parents have been separated, then divorced for two years now. And although I did not have to go through my own stages of grief to deal with it (mostly because there was no grief; I felt like it was long overdue and the day that my dad had moved out I thought was a bright beginning towards family happiness), I am still trying to get my mom to see it the same way that I do.

I keep trying to excavate the core issue here so I could “learn from the mistakes of others” but too many things emerge out of the water for me to say that he was impossible to deal with but she could’ve used her woman’s power to change things around. But the question is: should she have?

My mother was always a very grounded and practical person. My dad liked to take calculated risks, albeit maybe not as calculated as my mom would have liked them to be. She chose to accept that everybody lived average family lives and that forever and ever happiness only existed in story books. She was great at handling the worst when she knew that it was the only way out. Even when she was worried, she had a look of determination on her face. That’s why I can’t figure out why she doesn’t see this as just another challenge on her path she needs to get through. Maybe this was how she was before because other people, her family, depended on her keeping her cool and now it’s only her for whom this challenge really matters. And she’s crumbling.

There is a huge list of reasons why I never got along with my dad. Maybe we are too alike to keep seeing our own minuses mirrored at us in each other. But regardless, his actions following through the divorce were not honourable and so, unfortunately I got a little biased along the way.

The thing that my dad had never realized is that in a relationship of a woman and a man, moreover – a marriage, the woman manifests. She creates forms, “castles in the air”, that the man then substantiates using his God given physical power. If she is convinced that his goals do not meet the best interest of the entire family, she will paint a different picture, which will bystep his original plans. He could huff and puff but they will both be at a standstill because the man is not putting in the effort into this newly created picture and the woman refuses to manifest the man’s picture because she doesn’t have faith in it. A woman’s faith is like steam powering a train. You could try pushing a train on your own but it will be the steam giving it full force of speed. And without a train, a steam is just useless vapor. And unfortunately my dad never seemed to realize that. He definitely knew that her lack of faith in his investment plans was the stopper too difficult for him to remove and for that, he got angry at her.

So in his mind – she wasn’t fulfilling one of her wifely duties: supporting the husband. But he also never realized that one of his husband duties was performed substandard: the duty to protect. It is a husband’s job to make his wife feel that she is fully protected from everything, safe in his little bubble. She has to feel safe from any possible outside threats (not just bullies on the street, although that’s part of the list too) including financial ones. How is she supposed to feel safe if her entire marriage she only heard, “We are on a budget” “We can’t afford that” or “We have other priorities”? I remember the days when my dad would bring home some expensive piece of technology, like the blu-ray player right when they first came out or a new laptop or else, and my mom would just be stupified in shock. He wanted to spoil himself once in a while but how is she to feel if not only was she not consulted on the purchase but every other 364 days of the year, she gets told that there’s a budget to abide to? She couldn’t even accept gifts because she felt that the money that was spent on her could have been spent somewhat more usefully to buy something for her children; she was that selfless and still is. But why? Because for 25 years the fear-based belief had rooted itself deep into her subconscious that money is tight and we need to survive. Same as it is the husband’s job to be the primary breadwinner according to the Vedas, same it is to provide comforts to his family, especially the woman who birthed two of his children and left entirely everything to move to a country she didn’t want to go to.

If he had known those two factors, maybe she would feel safer about him taking the risks that he did. Maybe he would have gotten the support he wanted because she would believe in him more…

On Vedas… (My own reflections)

December 11th, 2011 | Posted by Lunar in Reviews | Vedas - (0 Comments)

I have stumbled upon the Vedic teachings through a friend of mine about 4-5 years ago. To be quite honest, they didn’t appeal to me at first. Their understanding of what constituted to BE a Woman seemed to be too strict, unrealistic, and narrow-minded to me at first. Some of it was completely indigestible to me and certain parts simply brought me down because I didn’t know that any of those old school preachings had a backbone to them. When someone told me, “You shouldn’t do that; you’re a girl!” I could very well tell them where they could stick it. After all, no one could ever offer me a decent enough of an argument in supportive evidence of that claim. [How "lawyer" of me ;) ] And then years go by and finally I come across people that do explain the Why’s along with the Should’s. But by then I have already done enough / became enough of the things outside of my womanly nature that it seemed like a mountain to conquer. I was curious an strong-willed, which is sometimes a bad combination. But this is not a regretful reflection by any means :)

The Vedic civilization began to disintegrate about 10,000 years ago. It was an astounding society by all means. And I believe that some of their progress they owed to their spiritual education and strict way of living. (But it would only be us who would call it strict because highly evolved people have no need to degrade into the lower vibrations and “let loose” like we do these days).

You may think it is all a nice fairy tale like the Creation Story but as of today, there is but one last surviving member of that Vedic civilization inhabiting the earth with us. And beyond following her woman’s ways, like only wearing skirts (even though she lives in Taiga, the dense woods of Siberia), her psychic power exceeds anything we may have ever imagined. In fact, right after her books were published (she entrusted her knowledge with this man who promised he would help her with this task), she was soon endangered having to be forcefully moved into an area where she could be “observed” like a monkey in the zoo purely just because she had such a clear connection with the universe, the spirit world, the energy beings, and so on. She was perceived as an anomaly by these people and yet when she came out to greet them, she still spoke to their Highest selves, all the while knowing what their lower intentions were for her.

I’m reading one of her books right now, third one in the series: The Space of Love. It is written in a factual novel-based form and honestly, I can’t remember the last time I read something that could touch your soul on so many ways. You’ll cry, you’ll laugh, your heart will yearn and.. it’s just something you have to literally “go through” yourself to really know why people are so affected by it. There are now translations of these books (9 in the series) into 54 languages, available worldwide. You don’t have to read them in order (I never follow directions properly, not even in cooking / baking) but definitely don’t miss this one. It reminds you of what you have forgotten since you were a child… how to be compassionate, how to love, how to feel. Priceless.

Also in the series (all by V. Megre):

  1. Anastasia
  2. The Ringing Cedars of Russia
  3. The Space of Love
  4. Co-Creation
  5. Who are we?
  6. The Book of Kin
  7. The Energy of Life
  8. New Civilization (Book 8 – Part 1)
  9. Rites of Love (Book 8 – Part 2)
PS: If you decide to buy any of these aforementioned books, I would really appreciate if you supported me by buying it from one of my links :) Thank you. And I hope you enjoy them as much as I know I will.
… In any way, the reason why I wanted to do these reflections is because I’m happy to report that one tiny bit at a time I can approach that imagined by Vedas ideal of what a woman should be :) Over the weekend, my husband bought me a new pair of hot-looking boots that will make it easier for me to wear skirts and dresses over the winter (to work and other places in particular; I only had suede ones before that were very fussy about the weather). ANND I finally got the sewing patterns for summer dresses that I was so patiently waiting for to arrive over the mail from Amazon! So hopefully this winter / spring / summer I can turn a new leaf in my wardrobe ;) And I’m definitely excited to finally start making decent-to-wear clothing items, not just Halloween costumes ;)

Vedas: The Secret Power of Women – Part 3

December 7th, 2011 | Posted by Lunar in Vedas - (0 Comments)

… These gender qualities oppose each other in good karma and in bad just the same. So the fewer the feminine qualities a woman has, the worse her family karma is. One could analyze one’s family karma by the number of these positive qualities.

Next strength: Artistic execution of homely duties. This is a power, which also needs to be learnt and cultivated. It doesn’t mean that you just need to learn how to cook, wash & clean, sew, and so on. The artistry lies in the psyche. The woman creates the atmosphere inside her home. It is her psychological environment. Everyone knows that two women can’t live in the same home and get along because each one will want to create her own psychological environment, unless it’s a mother and a daughter and the daughter knows not to interfere with the way mom runs things around the house. The mother’s psychological environment is dominant and the daughter submits to it.

When a woman executes her duties around the house, she must do so with love in relation to the people she lives with. And this happens to be her main weaponry. (more…)

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