Debut

by an accordionist

In my heyday when I was very young my cherished ambitions were of someday achieving stardom and fortune – and not in the too far distant future either. To me the only way to "make it" was as an actress on the great stages of the world, where I had visions of performing to packed houses of awestruck audiences with standing ovations, rave reviews, multitudes of flowers and with my path strewn with admirers. I was to appear in La Scala, Covent Garden and Carnegie Hall, and as the ultimate denouement to a long and glittering career I would achieve glory on the stage of the Sydney Opera House. Or so I hoped.

I had to start somewhere and opportunity knocked in the form of the school pantomime. The script had been written by our deputy principal, who was also the casting director, and it was called: "Beauty Meets The Incredible Hulk." I thought, "Wow! Terrific! That sounds like an auspicious beginning," and immediately auditioned for the part of an ugly sister. I won the part of Salmonella, beating off 16 other aspiring actresses for the honour. I fell easily into the exciting whirl of rehearsals and classes that followed – schoolwork came a distant second – and the role came easily to me. On stage I had a commanding presence, and I was spiteful and haughty like no other.

A few days later, doom struck. The main characters were assembled in the dressing room backstage when the door opened... ominously. We beheld the form of the diminutive music teacher-come-musical director, before whom all habitually bowed and scraped. She entered the room with a terrible step, drew herself up to her full fearsome height of 4 foot 10 inches and delivered my burgeoning career a crushing blow. "She cannot have the part, we need her in the orchestra," was her brutal edict. I kept silent, smugly assuming the casting director would quell and subdue her – but no! He cowered before her – all 6 foot 3 inches of him! Let me tell you never to leave deputy principals to do your pleading for you – they lack the fortitude! In horror, agony and despair I was cast to the pit, where I languished inharmoniously and pined discordantly. I was consoled only by the thought that my day was yet to come.

I thought it had arrived two years later when I gatecrashed my way into the seventh form Arts Club at school by winning the part of a witch in Shakespeare's MacBeth. I won it partly on the strength of my looks – my long hair, which reached all the way down my back, was black and shiny as the wing of a rather albino raven and my eyes were as tragic as suppressed laughter would allow. I was, however, long and skinny, and somehow managed to exude the required amount of brooding malevolence. Hope and excitement reigned supreme and my dream was alive again as I "Double, double, toil and troubled," my way through the next few weeks, nurturing wrinkles on my brow, eating liquorice to make my teeth black and practising my cackle.

Alas and alack, was my dream never to be? The play was cancelled due to lack of interest. How was I to achieve fame and social brilliance if I couldn't even make opening night? I was thwarted and inconsolable. My hopes had been dashed to the ground and kicked in the teeth. I carefully picked up the shattered remnants of my dream and tucked them away in mothballs.

That summer there entered into my gloom and despondency an invitation from a friend to spend a week camping at her grandfather's private beach on the Coromandel peninsula. I was in practise for an Arts festival, in which I was entered as an open solo competitor, but I went anyway. After hours of driving, then travelling on back-country roads, and bumping through native bush for a mile in a four-wheel drive vehicle – this place was very secluded – we arrived at the idyllic, unspoilt spot. Then came healing, halcyon days. It is hard to stay gloomy and despondent when you're laughing, frolicking, swimming, rowing and having fun on a small beach, all to yourselves, and I didn't quite manage it.

New Years day dawned and the Arts festival was only a week away. I sighed and heaved my accordion up the bush track to the top of a small cliff whose face opened to the sea. This cliff was at the centre of a small cove whose bush-clad walls rose up and curved around, and all combined to make a large and acoustically wonderful natural amphitheatre. I sat up there and played to the sea. The piece I was practising was the ten minute long 'Trieste Overture' by Frosini. When I finished I was met with thunderous applause! While I had been wrapped up in the final movement – the Vivace – I was totally oblivious to the seven boats, four canoes, two windsurfers and waveskier that had appeared and parked at the bottom of the cliff. So with my final flourish I opened my eyes, and as the echo died away I was met with cheering and clapping from the erstwhile empty seascape!

It dawned on me then that my debut had just crept up and pounced on me, and – although it was a far cry from the Sydney Opera House – the ovation was just as sweet, as I savoured my moment of fame.

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Pop

My Pop got his pilot's licence when he was 15 years old.

Pop in the Air Force

(Psst... he had actually been flying since he was 12 years old, whenever his Dad needed him to topdress the farm!) Only three years later he was drafted by the RNZAF and sent off to war. He wasn’t actually part of the action as he was stationed in Canada, but a World War affects everybody and he longed for peace and to go home but stuck at it stoically.

Because he was so skilled at flying he had been made a pilot officer – ironically he was younger than almost all of the young men he taught to fly. He said that in the short amount of time he had them he taught them as many safety manoeuvres and tricks as he possibly could in order to save their lives, as after a very brief few weeks they would be whipped away to war and he would have to start the intensive all over again with a new batch of young men. It was heartbreaking work. He was also chagrined to see the primitive, substandard and defective aircraft that 'his boys' went off in – an unfortunate upshot of hurriedly mass-produced wartime machinery. These boys respected and obeyed him – partly through shortage of time and the fact that what he had to teach them could save their lives, but also because he was fiery (a redhead!), intense (a Virgo!) and really clever. He came home heartily disillusioned with war (who wouldn't?) and prayed that there would never be another – and his prayer never abated in intensity.

Pop at Vets

After the war he was appointed a large tract of land to farm in Te Kowhai (near Whatawhata, in the Waikato Basin). There he lived with Grandma (a nurse who treated returned servicemen) and they raised two young boys, Uncle Colin and Dad.

Several decades later the land was tamed and both sons 'settled down' (is that what marriage is called?) and had their own little mites. They settled their respective families close-by – Uncle Colin 50 metres up the road and Dad on the other side of the hedge – and things were idyllic. Grandma had by that time situated a chicken coop and landscaped her extensive gardens: there were lawns for go-karting, fish ponds, bird baths, imitation flamingos and swans, fountains, lily ponds, troughs with frogs in them, a plum tree, a zen pebble garden with a maple tree feature, a native bush stand, huge camellia bushes, a mandarin tree, rhubarb (that Mum sometimes tried to feed us), a macrocarpa hedge that was cool to climb along the top of, archways and tunnels through the hedge, climbing trees, a bamboo stand and a mysterious greenhouse. Those were the days of games of cricket in the early evening, puppies, fresh eggs, fresh milk from Mary-Anne the Friesian house cow, calves, lambs, and Pop racing the dog up the road in his Daimler (the dog usually took a shortcut and won). Pop would borrow his Te Kowhai friend Max Clear's single-engine plane and top-dress the maize paddocks. He would sometimes ask if my brother or I would like to come but Mum always said, "No," because he was too much of a daredevil! (In retrospect I understand her concern but I wasn't brilliantly happy about it at the time!)

Pop at Whangamata

At some point in my childhood Pop lost all his teeth. Not at once – it was a gradual process. As his false teeth were uncomfortable, he just didn't wear them! So I always remember Pop best with no teeth. His gums became so tough that eventually he could munch on dry hard toast with ease. I never thought about it until I got older, then I got all sensitive about it and wondered what my friends would think. I always said, "Would you wear them to my 21st birthday party?" And he always promised to bring them along. And he did. He had them in his pocket to show to anyone who asked.

Pop at Whangamata

He, Grandma and Spot the fox terrier retired to Whangamata (on the Coromandel Peninsula) to their beach house. He kept busy mowing people’s lawns, tending gardens, growing veggies and renovating downstairs into a flat so the families could come and stay. They were never lonely. Pop's character (and Grandma was a bit of a character herself!) ensured they had company always – and some were famous even. (I once served a lemonade to Selwyn Toogood, a TV personality, in Pop's lounge!) And Pop loved children. He was lively and smart, and all the kids on Pipi Road gravitated to his place. He played Bobs, spotlight tiggy, table tennis (where he cheated like anything!), went fishing, and played cards (where he also cheated like anything!) and was all-round fun. he served up fried eggs which were poached in butter and his thick white toast dripped with melted slabs of butter – yum! He was popular and loved, could happily argue about anything at all, and the house resounded with laughter, his highly skilled whistling, and shouts (usually when he was discovered cheating!)

Pop and Me

There are so many memories of things that happened then. Always something – every day! Like when Pop really really badly wanted to go and see Crocodile Dundee. So I took him – however I don’t think he had been to a movie theatre since the war and he found the cinema screen huge and kept saying, "Good Lord!" Also, he cackled continuously (he had a really hearty chuckle!), even through the quiet bits. I was mortified. Usually, also, when you talk to someone during a movie, you murmur under the sound of the movie – but Pop yelled over it whenever he wanted to tell me something! (As he always gave a running commentary whilst watching TV, this shouldn't have surprised me.) The people around us must have wondered – I expected an usher to tell us to leave at any moment! I can look back now and laugh about it – but it has taken a while. Also, when I finished my Masters degree I dedicated my thesis to my grandparents – and he blew me a kiss! He was so proud of me.

He nursed Grandma until she died, and then he was touched with loneliness. However he was not well himself and died not long afterwards. For several years I was too sad to go to his house in Whangamata, which was now ours. Sometimes I would go, but could not stay for long as I found it painful to remember the happy times that were now over and never to be repeated.

When I joined the Sri Chinmoy Centre I became acquainted with the concept of 'Joy Weekends' – weekends where a group of people from the Centre would go away somewhere and play games, swim, run, meditate and – above all – eat yummy food! We started using Pop's place as a Joy Weekend retreat, and to my relief and joy I again found happiness in the place. These weekends got bigger and bigger and more popular (they really are fun!) so as well as Pop's place (which, with ingenuity, comfortably accommodated 20) we rented baches nearby as well. These weekends changed my perspective, washing away the sadness and replacing it with joy. I can now remember Pop, not with grief, but with happiness as I think of the fun times and laughter we used to have, along with the sheer force of his bubbly and brilliant personality. And he would really like that.

1989

Every story needs a beginning so this one will begin in 1989. It will chronicle a family crisis – or rather a series of family crises – culminating in the annihilation of two entire generations of my family in a relatively short length of time! But I am getting ahead of myself.

Four generations

Four generations of my family in one place...

A rough précis is called for to bring you up to speed: the fabric of my life had already started to fall away by the deaths of my Mum's Dad and my Dad's Mum, two people I was extremely fond of. At the beginning of 1989, which was the final year of my Masters degree in Science, the main biochemistry freezer at Waikato University broke down, compromising the research quality of everything stored in it. Unfortunately the entire stock of samples comprising my own two-year old study was stored in it. My choices were either to walk away, or to reconstruct my entire thesis work in a few months to get it back to the stage where it was.

There began a frenzied and dedicated piece of research – taking 16 to 18 hours (usually) and sometimes 24 hours a day, for seven days a week – as I frantically (with the clock ticking down on my research grant!) pieced together my entire Masters project.

March, April, May fell away with my musical career on hold and friends complaining that I never phoned or went out any more. I think it was about June when my Mum received a phone call saying that her brother in Brisbane was dying of leukemia and only a bone marrow transplant from an homologous sibling would give him a chance to live, so would she please go to the Royal Princess Hospital in Brisbane immediately for screening as a possible donor.

So Mum got a passport quickly (yes! That was her first overseas trip!) and went to Brisbane to spend a week at the hospital. I looked after the house and cooked for Dad and my brother whilst she was away – tucking them into my rigorous schedule.

Then the day she arrived back she received a phone call from the Cancer Society in Whangamata, "... Could she come, please, and nurse her mother (my Nana) who was passing into the final stages of cancer and wouldn't last the week." Mum was basically packed already, so off she went. We reckoned without the superior constitution of my Nana, whose good healthy lifestyle made her a robust patient! Mum was away for nigh on 7½ weeks! During that time my Dad – whose own father had by now been admitted to a private hospital in Hamilton, also dying of cancer – under emotional stress and suffering from an ulcer – wrote off the family car on an uneven road surface on his way to Whangamata to visit Mum. Because of the hospital reforms and so forth at the time, he was sent home to me! He had a crushed hand and a fractured skull, which I was to nurse daily. I now had to come home from University three or four times a day, pushing my studies late into the night. On top of that, two days later – because of the same reforms – my poor dying Poppa (Dad's Dad) was sent from the private hospital, also for me to look after!! Luckily this was sorted out as an unfortunate error and the hospital took him back in less than a week. Throughout this time of family upheaval our warm, fluffy, stable family cat formed a habit of being ill on the carpet daily, so our lounge constantly smelt of disinfectant.

My poor brother was beside himself at this time because he was unfortunately domestically challenged. He had never shown interest in the oven or washing machine and knew not how to use them. Hence I had to make a lot of trips to and fro, and the University was on the other side of the city. However he bought takeaways for us all whenever I let him and gave me some money for petrol.

Two and a half weeks before my Nana died, her mother (my Great Granny) was due to turn 94 years old. Amidst the preparations for her birthday party my dear Great Granny – aware of her daughter’s illness but (as we all were) ever hopeful of recovery – was anxiously asking if my Nana would be there. For days she would demand news of her – 'Just how ill was she?' 'Was she getting better?' and 'Did she need a visit from her Mum?' She did not seem to heed the dire reports. Finally she understood that my Nana would not be there – that, in fact, she was dying – and Great Granny sank into a terrible despair. A couple of days before her birthday, she died of a heart attack brought on by depression – and the food ordered and prepared for her birthday party was ironically eaten at her wake.

I had been praying to God constantly from the beginning of the year as I found this gave me peace. But my relationship with God changed subtly over time and as the fabric of my life became more distorted and unreal (for a long time I had that feeling you get when the rug is pulled out from under your feet – a sensation of falling, but before you hit the floor), so God became more real and substantial. I came to the understanding that everything – and everyone! – was temporary and could be taken away from you – and the only thing that was constant – that you always had – was God.

A couple of weeks after Great Granny's funeral the district nurse at Whangamata phoned to say that my Mum needed me there. Seven weeks of nursing her beloved mother and watching her invariably decline, as well as the news of her dear grandmother's death, had taken their toll on Mum. So I put University on hold (Some Things Are Bigger Than A Masters Degree) and went.

I went and saw my beautiful and beloved Nana's body ravaged by a terrible disease. (I will not go into the details of that). The wonderful and caring volunteers from the Cancer Society and my Mum were keeping an around-the-clock vigil by her bedside, which I joined. Usually at this advanced stage of illness the patient lapses into a coma – but my Nana was denied this blessed relief and was conscious and aware. At one point when I was there alone with her, she rallied – her eyes were mucoid and her tongue swollen (she couldn’t really move much except for her hand a little). The only noises in the room were the sound of her morphine pump and the constant dull booming of the ocean outside – and I asked her if she wanted anything. She indicated to come a little closer, her breathing rasping badly as she made the attempt to speak. She said, "You’ve got to stick up for yourself!" She gathered herself again, "I won't always be here for you," and again, "You've got to stick up for yourself – don't be meek like I was, too often." And her energy was spent. I cried. Even though she was near death and in terrible pain, she was still trying to prepare me for life and take care of me. (My grandparents were singularly caring, loving and self-giving people and I greatly cherished – and still cherish – their wonderful qualities).

Two days later she passed away.

The experience I am going to relate now is deeply personal and I have the courage to tell it after so many years because Sushmitam has shared a personal experience of hers with me in which a very similar thing happened. So I feel I am not nuts after all!

The instant my Nana died, a part of myself was very painfully wrenched from me. She was not just my Nana – she was my mentor and best friend. We laughed about the same things, I had spent a lot of my life staying with her and I loved her – body and soul. With everything that had happened leading up to this very moment, (and then this absolutely unthinkable Thing that had happened!!) something broke inside of me. I was suddenly a small child lost in the wilderness in a storm, coming upon a black, yawning abyss and about to fall into it. My entire being cried a Terrible Cry: "GOD!!!!!"

And God Came. Right then, right there.

My grasp of English (which is extensive) is entirely inadequate to describe what happened next, but I will make an attempt of sorts: all of a sudden my entire upper body was completely filled with a very intense sensation of feelings – Vastness, Peace, Strength, Joy, Intensity. This may sound strange, but suddenly I was being comforted in the Lap of God, watching as my body was taken over by Someone Else. I watched as Someone Else put their arms around my poor heartbroken Mum and comforted her. I also watched as Someone Else tried to make a cup of tea for Mum, the district nurse and the Cancer Society Lady. (Someone Else did not know how to do it properly, and lined up all the cups and poured the jug backwards and forwards above them – and from God's Lap I laughed, so did Someone Else – and I also heard my Nana laugh!!) All the time, I was actively trying not to giggle and was terribly afraid that the district nurse would notice the mirth and try to sedate me for hysteria!

I do not know if anyone noticed anything strange about me that day, but Someone Else also organised the house, organised with the district nurse for the undertaker, wrote half the eulogy for Nana, and did a whole lot of other necessary things. The intensity that I felt in that time when I needed nurturing the most was like a fire inside my chest – along with it came Peace and Joy, an endless amount of energy, and no sleep. I did not go to bed for three days and nights and was not tired or fatigued in the slightest. The first night I spent a long time just looking at the sea from the window – everything, you see, was like a new and fresh experience. Then I went down the sand dunes to the beach and watched the moonlight on the waves – all the while the fire was burning inside of me.

The next day, Someone Else packed up Mum, the cat, and the house and drove us back to Hamilton. After the funeral, Someone Else stayed and wrote a large chunk of my Masters thesis before gradually fading away as Mum and I got back on our feet.

There is a famous poem entitled, 'Footprints,' written by M. R. Powers, where a man dreams that he is walking through life side by side with the Lord, leaving two sets of footprints. However he notices that at the worst times of his life there is only one set of footprints, and these were the times when the Lord was carrying him. I now have a personal experience of what that poem means.

My faith in God has been replaced by (for lack of a better word) a Knowing, for faith, you see, is belief without proof. God has come to me and proven Himself, so now I have gone beyond mere faith – I Know.

For what He did for me (and my family) through this time alone, God has earned my undying Gratitude.

 

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A Tribute To Poppa

Personally, 1989 was a bad year. Two of my grandparents had recently died and the other two were dying – Poppa (Dad's Dad) was in hospital and Nana (Mum's Mum) was in her home being nursed by my Mum, in a coastal town two hours away.

Poppa

My Poppa on the day in question...

Hospital reforms were being made at a political level with cuts being made to services and staff, and things were uncertain at the patient level. My father, under emotional stress due to our circumstances, had a car accident where he wrote off the family car, crushed one hand and fractured his skull. Because he was not technically considered to be fully unconscious upon reaching hospital in the ambulance, he was not admitted as a patient (under the newly forming laws) and was sent home to me instead. At the same time, the medical insurance company paying Poppa's fees for his private hospital room where he was dying of cancer were not sure of their grounds and stopped paying his fees (albeit only for a week) so he was sent home to me also.

I was doing a full-time Masters degree at University and holding down a part time job at the same time, to make ends meet. Every couple of hours I would have to drive home to get a meal or snack ready for the invalids, and bathe Dad's wounds – Poppa fractured a rib, falling out of bed, so he was forbidden to help – and then dash back to University, in between experiments, working late into the night to get everything done. On top of everything, the family cat – sensitive to the environment – kept throwing up onto the carpet.

One day as I was turning into our street on one of my mercy dashes home, the muffler of my jalopy fell off and started dragging under the car. This was almost a final straw. I parked in our driveway, fighting tears and a sense of 'not coping', then went inside to prepare morning tea for the invalids. When I got to Poppa's room with a cup of tea, he wasn't there! Feeling doom pending, I went to look for his body but he wasn't in the house. There was a small noise outside and, upon investigation, I found two thin little pyjama'd legs with slippers sticking out from under my car. Poppa had heard the car coming from down the street (with no muffler!) and had slipped out to the garage and got pliers and wire to fix my car. At that point I did cry when I found him, but with tears of love – at this stage as his life was slowly ebbing away from him, his first thought was to try to help me, putting his family before himself – as he always had throughout his life.

Do the right thing. Be the right person. Lo, God is coming To garland Your self-giving life. - Sri Chinmoy.

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Smile at the Dentist's Office

Sri Chinmoy's soul bird design tote bag

One of my favorite birthday presents last October was a canvas tote bag with the word "smile" in Sri Chinmoy's elegant handwriting with one of his distinctive soul bird drawings next to it.

I immediately started using it as my handbag and it was such a perfect gift since some affectionately (or not) call me a bag lady since I typically tote around several bags of food, water, camera, books, etc. as part of my daily routine.

I happened to be using this bag as my pocketbook when I went for my twice-a-year teeth cleaning appointment at the dentist. Because I have no dental insurance even though I pay very high health insurance premiums, the expense of these visits tends to find me a little grumpy about them. As I sat down in the dentist chair, I put my Sri Chinmoy canvas tote bag on a chair in the corner of the room. When they announced that they wanted me to get full x-rays despite my memory that at my last visit they said I would not need them, I became grumpy indeed as I imagined their price tag. I grumbled to her about this discrepancy and my unhappiness at hearing this news.

The dental technician might have been legitimately feeling grumpy about me as well by this point. Perhaps with the hidden motivation to change the subject, she commented on how much she liked the design of my tote bag sitting on the chair. I told her it was the artwork of a man named Sri Chinmoy and then her attention turned back to cleaning my teeth.

I looked over at the large word on the bag sitting on the chair. The word "Smile" seemed to somehow exude a cheerful consciousness in its very style and I sheepishly felt the whole thing was rather humorous since my demeanor was a far cry from its message. For in that moment, I was doing anything but smiling and I felt slightly foolish.

The next time I go to the dentist I'll have to try harder to not wear my opinions about high health care costs so openly on my sleeve (or face). Apparently this bag will do more than carry my keys, wallet and cell phone. It will carry a reminder as well that a smile can make the world a brighter place. I make no big promises but it can never hurt to be reminded of this simple yet powerful truth.

Spiritual Friends

Spiritual friends are more like brothers and sisters. Underneath our differences, personalities and individualities lies a very familiar oneness, a deep love and a unique understanding. I feel this with every person that I have begun to know on Sri Chinmoy’s path - the ‘path of the heart’.

My Singing Friends

Singing with friends at the Sri Chinmoy Centre in Auckland

From the continual inner and outer guidance of our spiritual teacher Sri Chinmoy, we each learn to gain access to and live our lives from within our spiritual heart, rather than the mind. Living in the heart colours everything in life with a beautiful glow and brings forward qualities of love, compassion, forgiveness and happiness.

Spanning out, not only to friends but to strangers also, these qualities radiate unconditionally from the heart and lead to a divine love for people everywhere, for all of humanity.

In our every day lives, students of Sri Chinmoy practice to live from within the spiritual heart and bring forward the positive qualities that the heart embodies. As a result an amazing feeling of harmony is felt within this large group of diverse people from many different nations and cultures. With harmony it is astonishing what can be achieved! I travel to New York where Sri Chinmoy lives, along with many other students from around the world and everywhere, among all, I see the same harmony and oneness, love and respect.

As spiritual friends, we share joy and laughter, discoveries, inspiration and aspiration. We lift each other up when one falls. We inspire and encourage each other to run towards the goal. All spiritual seekers are on the same journey, striving for the same inner freedom and happiness, fulfilment and transformation. We spread love and light to people everywhere just by feeling it within ourselves. And all of this is a result of living in the heart.

The feeling that is experienced in an environment where the power of love leads our lives, rather than the ‘love of power’, is something so unique and special. I often feel that there will come a day when the whole world will be like this and all human beings will have the opportunity to experience this beauty, where unconditional love, understanding, genuine concern, oneness, and respect is shared between people everywhere. It starts from each individual and the blossoming of each spiritual heart.

 

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Articles and Stories

Articles and Stories by Alesha Thorpe

Meditation – Learning meditation has been the most rewarding and beneficial persuit in my life.

The Ever-Transcending Goal – For as long as I can remember, competing at the Olympics has been a fairytale-dream of mine...

My Life's Adventures – My whole life has been so much fun and I feel very grateful for the opportunities and experiences I have had. Every moment in my life has lead me to where I am right now and there is no other place in the universe I would rather be!

Having a Spiritual Teacher – When we want to learn a musical instrument we go to a teacher who is accomplished in this field and we take lessons.

A Life-Changing Opportunity – After attending the meditation classes offered at the Sri Chinmoy Centre and experiencing for myself the lasting peace and inner happiness that was beginning to bloom in my life, I was growing an inner hunger to discover more about spirituality.

Meditation Nights at the Sri Chinmoy Centre – Our Centre meditation nights are a highlight in my week, when I always have my best meditations and my aspiration seems to multiply.

The Magic of Mornings and the Joy of Running – Unleash the weapons! Slay the dragons! For the treasure that lies beyond is definitely worth it!

A Great Way To Start The Day – Running... out onto the fog-laden street. My cold limbs reluctantly awake.

My Room – I love coming home to my room. Everything about it inspires me and reminds me of what is important in my life.

Reflections From The World Harmony Run – Fifty-two kilometres we had covered since daybreak, only eight to go...

Auckland Joy Weekend – Meditation: Solitary? Secluded? A retreat from the world? A life of austerities, spiritual disciplines and world renunciation? FAR FROM IT!!!

Spiritual Friends – Spiritual friends are more like brothers and sisters. Underneath our differences, personalities and individualities lies a very familiar oneness, a deep love and a unique understanding. I feel this with every person that I have begun to know on Sri Chinmoy's path – the 'path of the heart'.

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