Positive Qualities – Enamoring & Noble

Self-discipline begins with the mastery of your thoughts. If you don’t control what you think, you cannot control what you do. — Napoleon Hill (1883-1970) American author
Fill your heart with loving aspirations and superior values and you will realize the requirements of this week’s qualities: Noble Enamoring.
Peace,
Jim
            ENAMORING
Definition: filling with love and desire; charming; captivating; fascinating
            NOBLE
Definitions: (1) having or showing superior moral qualities or ideals; (2) famous, illustrious, or renowned; having eminence, dignity, excellence, or fame; worthy; (3) grand; stately; splendid; magnificent; magnanimous; (4) possessing a courageous or gallant spirit
Derivation: Latin, “to know”
Synonyms: august, exalted, generous, high, imperial, lofty, majestic
Quote:
Noble aim, faithfully kept, is as a noble deed. — William Wordsworth (1770-1850) English Romantic Poet
Consider the Source




Positive Qualities – Munificent & Hopeful

Every heart that has beat strong and cheerfully has left a hopeful impulse behind it in the world. — Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) Scottish Poet
It may seem a bit pretentious to Hope to be Munificent. But if we tone it down to an aspiration maybe we can still shoot for it. Everything takes us a bit further along the way. Progress is the watchword of the universe. The search for value is a value in itself; and the higher we can imagine, the broader the quest. Keep stretching.
Peace,
Jim
            MUNIFICENT
Definition: liberal in giving or bestowing; generous; lavish
Synonyms: bountiful, helpful, open‑handed
            HOPEFUL
Definitions: (1) desire for good accompanied with a belief that it is obtainable; (2) expecting to get what one wants and needs; (3) having the vision, energy, and ability to turn dreams into reality
Synonyms: confidence, expectation
Compatible Qualities: determination, optimism
Consequential Quality: long‑suffering
Music: “Over the Rainbow” (1939) — Edgar Y. Harburg (1896-1981) American Lyricist
Quotes:
Hope springs eternal in the human breast. — Alexander Pope (1688-1744) English Poet

Hope is a good thing, maybe the best thing and no good thing ever dies. — Frank Darabont (1959 – ) The Shawshank Redemption

If the universe seems to be trying to destroy you, the best way to fight back is with hope.  — David Brin (1950 – ) Brightness Reef

 Hope is an orientation of the spirit, an orientation of the heart. It is . . . the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out.

— Vaclav Havel (1936 – ) Czech Poet and Politician

Observation:
The Basics in Life:
1. Values
2. Meanings
3. Hopes – goals and desires
4. Needs
5. Experiences
Comment: You can get there from here. You can always get to nirvana or normalcy or wherever you want to get, even if you are at rock bottom. Be grounded where you are and continue your journey. As you make up a new life, look back and gather the best of what you have achieved to make progress through the benevolent use of your experience.
Colors: blue, green, orange, rainbow
Symbols: 1) seeds; 2) the anchor; 3) the helmet
Consider the Source




JFK and the Fourth Estate

The corporate media inundates us with poll results concerning the approval ratings of the first three Estates of the Realm. But what if a completely independent poll were conducted concerning the performance of the Fourth Estate, our illustrious press. I suspect that, if it were even possible to conduct such an “independent poll,” our press would not fare well on the question of whether they are “honest brokers of information.”

Consider, for example, the recent press handling of the fiftieth anniversary of the Kennedy assassination. In light of this, ask yourself if Operation Mockingbird is still alive and well? Ask yourself, if you were conducting a murder investigation, would you put a man that was fired by the decedent on your investigative team? And, with that in mind, have you ever heard anyone in the main stream press question the appropriateness of having former CIA Director Allen Dulles sit on the Warren Commission?

Most people, who consider the Warren Commission Report to be a politically expedient gloss over, believe that a shadow government has operated continuously in this country from the days immediately following World War II to the present. They like to cite the Farewell Address of Dwight D. Eisenhower as a clear indicator of this moral inversion.

“Our military organization today bears little relation to that known by any of my predecessors in peacetime, or indeed by the fighting men of World War II or Korea…. In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex…. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted.”

– Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1961

Eisenhower was certainly a man in the know. And his successor also came to know these facts all too well, even unto death. The book “JFK and the Unspeakable,” by Jim Douglass, was recently endorsed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. It cites several facts that are documented in over 100 pages of endnotes, referring to declassified government documents contained in the National Archives building in Maryland.  These documents are readily available to the public as well as members of the press.

Among the points raised by Douglass are these:

  1. Eisenhower warned us of the “military-industrial complex” just before Kennedy took office
  2. JFK went toe to toe with military contractor United States Steel
  3. The military-industrial complex regularly pressured JFK to start all-out nuclear war
  4. JFK secretly brokered a nuclear disarmament treaty with Khrushchev
  5. JFK openly sided with Castro in the Cuban Revolution
  6. JFK was secretly working to end the US occupation of Vietnam
  7. JFK refused a plot to stage terrorist attacks on US soil to be blamed on Cuba
  8. Lee Harvey Oswald was a CIA asset
  9. Oswald was on the FBI’s payroll
  10. CIA assets helped Lee Harvey Oswald get work
  11. Oswald was seen in Dallas with a CIA covert ops chief two months before the assassination
  12. The CIA revealed their hand in killing JFK through the use of Oswald doubles
  13. The Warren Commission Report was a cover-up
  14. JFK’s assassination was supposed to happen in Chicago, not Dallas
  15. The real shooter in Dallas was on the grassy knoll, and carried a Secret Service badge
  16. CIA employee Sidney Gottlieb made Secret Service credentials

Ever since the slang “dumbing down” was first adopted in 1933 by motion picture screenplay writers, it has been used to encourage revisions of anything developed for public consumption “so as to appeal to those of little education or intelligence.” We really have no one to blame but ourselves for the success of our lemming-like press, for this is no longer the land that Edmond Burke wrote of to King George when he observed:

They . . . “snuff out the approach of tyranny in every tainted brief.”

— Edmund Burke (“Conciliation with America”‘; March 22, 1775)

There are sixteen points listed above that are supported by well documented research.  Our corporate media will never bite the hand that feeds them. The only hope remaining for this country lies with an engaged citizenry dedicated to exposing every sophistry and exposing that which lies in the shadows. Are the above listed allegations as raised by Jim Douglass true? While democracy itself may end with a failure to preserve net neutrality , the obligations of citizenship, in a participatory democracy, certainly begin with discerning motivations and considering the source.

© 2013 Robert H. Kalk

Consider the Source




Yours for the Striving

Logo - The Essential CurriculumWhen we align our objectives with the Divine will, when we strive for the attainment of a worthy goal, when we begin our work with a well defined plan, and when we have ability to work together with others effectively, we have already achieved the trajectory for success. For we know that “all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.”
All service is sacred in the spiritual world. Our celestial associates appreciate our efforts because they know there is no such thing as menial work. One minor change in perspective can turn the necessary but mundane task into an exhilarating, even fascinating, experience. The key is in seeing the parts within the whole or the forest from the trees.
Good management always involves three main processes: The probative, the directive, and the perfective. These become cyclical once any initiative comes to life.
We think of the probative as the assessment phase. It involves questions such as: “Should we be doing this?” “What resources, both human and material, can be brought to bear?” and “How can we best convey our findings to those who will be engaged in planning?”
The directive includes developing and refining plans in light of prior findings. Working even the best of plans usually involves some amount of improvisation the first time through. This is why managers are often selected on the basis of “Who’s best qualified to wing it.” They also possess a core skill set that includes an understanding of team dynamics, attention to an appropriate level of detail, and effective communications.
Perfective phasing is also known as the Virtuous Cycle. This includes a debrief, a post-mortem of sorts. “What went well?” and “What didn’t go so well” are at the top of the list for questions asked. Individual team members are encouraged to share their experiences, to reach a deeper understanding of any lessons learned, in ways that might benefit the whole team as well as those who depend upon them.
The cycle then repeats as the assessors consider the lessons learned in light of any additional and available resources that may be of value.
Whether you jump on a shovel for a living, or manage a multi-national corporation, this assess, direct, and perfect routine can help you. It applies to self-discipline just as it does to corporate governance. Self-mastery is a pre-requisite to the effective management of others.
At the Aevia Institutes of Management, we believe that developing an Appreciation for the Enduring Value of Individual Advancement (AEVIA) also benefits the organization, the nation, and the world. That’s why our management curriculum has an initial focus on such basic skills as managing your time. Your first step in the successful pursuit of a management career begins here:




Reflections on Right Sizing

“The foxes have holes, and the birds of heaven have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head,” and so it is today for many of his followers. Despite all the warnings about the snares laid by moneylenders, despite the fact that gage mort is literally translated as a pledge to give up one’s life, millions have lost their homes through mortgage exploits, and their quality of life through the service of debt.

Along the river banks and across the plains, archaeologists have unearthed abundant evidence of human practicality. The long evolutionary struggle is depicted in dwell time as our earliest ancestors enjoy the inspiration of mountain vistas and the tranquility of peaceful valleys. They also experienced the terror of lightning strikes, glacial advances, animal attacks, seismic events and lava flows.

Homo Erectus is constantly mobile as he steadily progresses through his gift of ingenuity. He seeks shelter in caves, from overhanging ledges and under the brush. By learning to fashion materials, such as clay, wood, and stone, early humans were able to move down from the treetops and out from the hillside grottoes to create family huts. The home had begun to take shape as the most basic human institution.

Then, as the ice advanced, man again appropriates the most practical shelter that nature has to offer. The comforts of home give way to necessity as protection from the elements drives him ever onward in search of more suitable provisions.

Flash forward a million years or so and consider the plight of today’s homo-sapiens. Extreme weather, internecine wars, and raging wildfires all continue and conspire to keep a great humanity unsettled. The voids are filled, as if by reflex, with stunted vegetation, outgassing trailers, and tent cities as the most desirable solutions are put off time and again.

Bloated governments have generated burdensome regulations that allow us to live simply only if we are tucked into very small sheds or build our houses on wheels. These influences are literally driving us into dwellings that are too costly to build, too large to heat or cool, and too burdensome to maintain. Politicians pay lip service to sustainability while erecting huge barriers to those who are sincerely trying to leave the smallest of footprints.

The art of living large in a small abode is intriguing to the upwardly mobile as well as those who have chosen, or have been forced, to downsize. In the first case, squandering precious resources on mortgage interest is one of the fastest ways to become a wage slave. In the second case, the escape from a debtor’s prison is liberating in more ways than one can imagine.

This is not to say that there is no value in stress. Sometimes having a tough, recurring nut to crack is precisely what’s needed to cure the ease drifting soul. But, for the highly motivated, for those whose enthusiasm truly emanates from en-theos (God within), there are higher callings.

Supporting the same entitled barons of financial sophistry who brought us the Great Swindle, known by the less discerning among us as the “Great Recession,” is a form of self-imposed detention. It saddles us with excessive drag. In contrast, a pay-as-you-go strategy is easier than one might think.

The TV that once occupied floor space can now hang on the wall, a cabinet door, or the front of a drawer. The oversized washers and dryers that are pushed by appliance stores in the U.S. can be replaced by a single more energy efficient under-the-counter unit, readily available in Europe or at U.S. RV stores. These compact combo units employ the same drum for both washing and drying. The range hood over your stove can be replaced by a combination hood, microwave and convection oven to save even more space.

Ask yourself, how many burners do you really use on your stove? How about supplementing with a guest’s hotplate or slow-cooker for the pot-luck seasonal bash? Could you eliminate cooking odors, and greasy films on the walls, by using the outside grill more often? Do you really need a big oven, the one you justified with the Thanksgiving turkey, if you’re now frying it outside anyway?

There are so many ways to get right-sized. If you’re reading the periodicals biblically, and the bible periodically, then find out how many of your favorite periodicals are now online. And, if you want to read your bible more often, download it to your tablet or smart phone. Who knows, you may even decide you prefer the page-white backlit display to your itty-bitty-book-light.

Ever wonder how many linear feet of shelf space you could eliminate by converting your music and books to digital form? What about that shoebox full of receipts? You could adopt a new policy of scannin’ and pitchin’ em. Some stores will even email them to you. Hard discs are cheap and they don’t seem to get any heavier when you fill them up.

Over half of the people who live in tiny houses have no mortgage. That’s twice as many as the average U.S. homeowner. Owners of small houses have more savings than the average homeowner. 89% of tiny house people have less credit card debt and 65% have no credit card debt at all while such dwellers are also earning $478 more annually than the average American. They are also twice as likely to have a master’s degree. It just goes to prove that less debt service gives us more time for gainful pursuits.

Everyone seems to have a different definition, of what constitutes small, but generally a “tiny house” is less than ten percent the size and cost of the average sized house currently built in the USA. Once a 30 year mortgage at a 4.25% interest rate is added to the cost of a “standard” 2,100 square foot house that sells for $272,000 the bill is $481,704. The $23,000 owner built tiny house is often built entirely from savings that would otherwise yield an insultingly low rate of return.

The home is the crowning achievement of human kind. The Living Crown (TLC) project within Ascension University and the Aevia Group is focused on this basic institution of human progress. We believe home building should be the essence and at the center of all educational effort.

When the Lord asks: “Where is the place of my dwelling?” we look to his handiwork, and a universe of nurturing infrastructure, for the answer. We are still at the creative stage of homebuilding and seek an understanding of just how a minimalist structure can support maximum functionality.

We are actively developing a rapid-deployment, fit-for-purpose product line featuring houses that float, rooms reinforced with carbon fiber, and suites that filter air and water through a unique circulatory system. They will be energy efficient as well as energy independent depending on a wide array of options. They can be pressed into service as houseboats, in-law suites, safe-rooms, stand-alone cabins, and emergency shelters. They will look and feel like cozy cottages.

We are witnessing a ceaseless progression in refining what has become society’s veritable foundation. And our focus on evolving science, best practices, and continuous improvement is motivated by our passion for improving the home and ennobling the home life. Alignment and integration within the various Ascension University fields of study insures our academic initiatives are conditioned by real-world experience, and that the applied technology is always cutting edge. We are fully engaged in the virtuous cycle and you can be too!

© 2013 Robert H. Kalk




Positive Qualities – Stout & Precious

In a real sense we become what we love and trust. Stages of Faith, Dr. James W. Fowler, Author
It is always a difficult thing for the mind to hold opposites in the mind at the same time. Liberal and conservative, justice and mercy, Stout and gentle are some examples. Nonetheless, we have the ability. If one is left and the other right, the key to harmonizing is to add the third, higher, dimension – go up. Recognizing the Precious values in each side will give us a solid foundation for compromise and enlightenment.
Have a peaceful Thanksgiving,
Jim
            STOUT
Definitions: (1) strong; sturdy; robust; able‑bodied; (2) bold; intrepid; valiant; brave; courageous; (3) resolute; fortitude; dauntless; (4) powerful; forceful
Synonyms: brawny, enduring, solid, staunch, substantial, vigorous
Balancing Qualities: generous, gentle
            PRECIOUS

Definitions: (1) great in significance or worth; very valuable; (2) much esteemed; held close and considered dear; beloved; (3) great in price; costly
Quote:
So precious is a person’s faith in God, so precious; never should we harm that. Because He gave birth to all religions.
— Saint Francis of Assisi [(born Giovanni Francesco di Bernardone] (1181-1226) Founder of the Franciscan Order
Consider the Source




Positive Qualities – Flourishing & True

The greatest use of life is to spend it for something that will outlast it. — William James (1842-1910) Philosopher
There is some confusion about how to be True to what. We know we have our own subjective realities; beliefs and experiences we may or may not share with others. But if (or since) one of those Others is the source and center of all reality, there is an Objective reality. Being finite we are on a journey toward this Light. A personal choice to align with the objective will not get us there all at once, but will ensure us the opportunity to head in the right direction. As we learn and grow we will Flourish spiritually.
Peace,
Jim
             FLOURISHING
Definitions: (1) increasing in wealth or honor; prosperous; (2) at the peak of development, activity, or influence; to be in one’s prime
Derivation: Latin, “flowering,” “to blossom”
Synonyms: thriving, triumphant
            TRUE
Definitions: (1) conforming to fact; real; (2) genuine; pure; legitimate; (3) loyal to a friend, idea, or ideal; faithful; steadfast; (4) honest; sincere; upright; (5) reliable; certain; (6) conforming to an established standard <true north>; exact; precise; accurate; (7) reflecting the essential character <true meaning>; (8) in proper order; in alignment to an important point or ideal; (9) logically necessary
Poetry:
This above all: to thine own self be true
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.
— William Shakespeare (1564-1616) King Henry IV
Consider the Source




Positive Qualities – Mediator & Happy

It is in your moments of decision that your destiny is shaped. — Anthony Robbins (1960-) Motivational Speaker
In order to intervene as a Mediator one must have a larger perspective. Indeed all growth is a lesson in seeing the bigger picture. Our other quality this week is just the same. Happiness can be a result of an advantageous chemical reaction but a higher, and more permanent, state of joy is not grounded in such fleeting things.
Peace,
Jim
            MEDIATOR
Definition: One who intervenes between parties at odds for the purpose of reconciling their differences; serving as a go-between and occupying a neutral position; able to see both sides and draw the sides together; bringing accord
Quote:
Unsolicited advice is the junk mail of life. — Bern Williams
Advice: Notwithstanding Mr. William’s quote, I have offered advice in this book. I hope some of it is of value to you, but if it does not strike a cord, then indeed, modify it to the best the you and situation require.
Comment: It would be wise not to intervene, in most cases, unless invited. Although you can be an intercessor, in a sense, as one who prays for the parties at odds.
Sometimes your position includes in its definition the role of mediator. As a parent you are a mediator by default.
          HAPPY
Definitions: (1) having or causing a feeling of great pleasure, joy, or contentment; pleased; satisfied; delighted; (2) favored by circumstances; lucky; fortunate; (3) exactly appropriate to the occasion; suitable and clever; felicitous; apt
Synonyms: blissful, blithesome, glad, merry, prosperous, successful
Quotes:
Effort does not always produce joy, but there is no happiness without intelligent effort. — The Urantia Book (48:7.10)
I hope you find, as I did, that happiness comes from noticing and enjoying the little things in life. — Barbara Ann Kipfer (1954 – ) 14,000 Things to Be Happy About
No man is more unhappy than the one who is never in adversity; the greatest affliction of life is never to have been afflicted. — Tryon Edwards (1809-1894) American Theologian
The rules of a happy life:
1. Don’t sweat the small stuff
2. It’s all small stuff

— George Elliot [born Mary Ann Evans] (1819-1880) English Novelist

Comment: The difference between happy and joyful is situational. It is hard to be happy while you are in pain, but the higher quality of joy can be experienced even in the face of great difficulty.
Suggestion: Decide to be happy – sincerely and completely – in the manner of the third definition above, “exactly appropriate to the occasion.” When you are happy in this way you are truly on your way to being content.
We all want to be happy, but sometimes it seems impossible. Even when you find yourself in an unhappy state of mind, you have to move forward in time anyway, so move forward with a positive, hopeful attitude. This will partially displace your actual attitude. You will be living on two levels: the level of your practical, realistic, daily life and the level of a higher, farseeing life. As you move through the present, project your sensibility and understanding toward how you want to feel and think. Gradually you will be in that better future.
Symbols: 1) water maidens; 2) cherry blossoms; 3) a leaf (Chinese); 4) the bat (Chinese); 5) the sun (American Indian); 6) the thunderbird (American Indian)
Consider the Source




Positive Qualities – Concise & Perfect

Picture yourself vividly as a winner and that alone will contribute immeasurably to your success. — Harry Emerson Fosdick (1874-1969) Clergyman
There are ideas of inherent Perfection. Can this be fit in with our experience of growth via choice? We finite beings are on a sliding scale of perfection. Eventually, in eternity, we will be able to look back on our progress and ahead to the distant possibility of absolute perfection. Even now we can have a relative idea of what is perfect, but this too grows as our perspective expands. In the mean time if we can be Concise with our language, visions, and next steps we will be achieving a larger view.
Peace,
Jim
            CONCISE
Definitions: (1) brief and exact; focused and to the point; comprehensive; (2) giving precisely what is needed
Synonyms: condensed, succinct
How to Live This Quality Today: Notice if the person you are talking to is very busy. If so, chatter about the kids and the weather will be a waste of their time. Courtesy sometimes demands being concise.
            PERFECT
Definitions: (1) complete in all respects; without defect or omission; faultless; (2) thorough excellence in skill or quality; expert; proficient; (3) completely correct or accurate; exact; precise; (4) without reserve or qualification; pure; (5) totally effective; meticulous; (6) a fine physical specimen; sound; flawless; (7) appreciative of the character or nature of someone or some thing; most admirable
Balancing Qualities: common sense, down‑to‑earth
Compatible Qualities: compromising, realistic
Quotes:
Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect. — The Bible, matthew 5:48

The most important question to ask at any one moment is, “How is this perfect?” — Joe Burull (1947 – ) American Photographer

When we realize a total of something as we are experiencing it, we are for that moment, perfect. — Jacquelyn Small, Transformers, the Therapists of the Future
From the Universal Father who inhabits eternity there has gone forth the supreme mandate, “Be you perfect, even as I am perfect.” — The Urantia Book (1:0.3)
The word “perfect” as the Bible uses it of men, does not refer to sinless perfection. Old Testament characters described as “blameless” or “wholly devoted” were obviously not sinless. Although a number of Hebrew and Greek words are translated as “perfect,” the thought is usually either “completeness in all details” (Hebrew: tamam; and Greek: katartizo) or “to reach a goal or achieve a purpose” (Greek: teleioo).
Scripture recognizes that Christians do not attain sinless perfection in this life.
— Cyrus I. Scofield (1843-1921) American Biblical Scholar, The Scofield Reference Bible
Three Stages of Perfection
1. Positional perfection, already possessed by every believer of Christ (Hebrews: 10:14)
2. Relative perfection, i.e., spiritual maturity, especially in the will of God, love, holiness, patience, and “everything good.” Maturity is achieved progressively, “perfecting holiness” and “Are you now being made perfect?” Perfection is accomplished through the gifts of ministry bestowed.
3. Ultimate perfection, perfection in soul, spirit, and body
— Cyrus I. Scofield (1843-1921) American Biblical Scholar, The Scofield ReferenceBible
Tip: Perfect is doing the next thing that is possible for you to do, and doing it with positive intention.
Comment: One does not become instantly perfect, but one is as perfect in the moment as one allows oneself to be. There are both absolute and relative perfection. Since we are finite beings, we should accept the fact that we are in the realm of relative perfection. If we compare absolute perfection to finite perfection there is a dramatic gap. But there need not be any negative connotation applied to relative perfection simply because the gap exists. Perfection is still perfection even in its most immature or childlike manifestation.
Question: Can I be perfect if I can not deal with my own perfection?
Symbols: 1) the circle; 2) the number ten
Consider the Source




Positive Qualities – Frank & Foxy

Undoubtedly, we become what we envisage. — Claude M. Bristol (1891-1951) Author
It is not often easy to be Frank. It must be accompanied by tact, diplomacy, a keen understanding and respect of the other person’s point of view, sincerity, and even humor. Children are naturally innocent and without guile. As we grow, we should make an effort to master the subtleties of communication. Foxy, in order to remain positive, also needs these softening edges.
Peace,
Jim
          FRANK
Definition: free in expressing what one thinks or feels; candid; free from reserve, disguise, or guile; open; ingenuous; clearly evident; plain
Derivation: Middle Latin, “free,” “at liberty”
Synonyms: honest, sincere
Balancing Qualities: articulate, compassionate
Too Far: brusque, piercing, tactless
          FOXY
Definitions: (1) slyly clever or cunning; crafty; sharp; (2) physically attractive <especially in an alluring way>
Consider the Source