Enjoy and please let me know how this guided meditation makes you feel in the comments below!
If you'd like to support the channel please consider the YouTube "Thanksgiving" button (a new option under videos, next to the "thumbs up button ") or please consider using PayPal. Thank you! 👇
CREDITS *Recorded & and edited with love on my cell phone *Music Lisence by Esistnichtsoernst, Angelic Choir "Juan Sánchez - Tolworth" is under a Creative Commons (CC-BY 3.0) license Music promoted by BreakingCopyright: bit.ly/bkc-tolworth Kevin MacLeod , Atlantean Twilight, Creative Commons *Video editing & Overlay photos from CANVA PRO *Voice over by Reyhan(me) *My Instagram :@theblisscouch (www.instagram.com/theblisscouch/) *My Facebook @reyhantoplu (www.facebook.com/reyhantoplu)
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
“We Indians know about silence. We are not afraid of it. In fact, for us, silence is more powerful than words. Our elders were trained in the ways of silence, and they handed over this knowledge to us. Observe, listen, and then act, they would tell us. That was the manner of living.
With you, it is just the opposite. You learn by talking. You reward the children that talk the most at school. In your parties, you all try to talk at the same time. In your work, you are always having meetings in which everybody interrupts everybody and all talk five, ten or a hundred times. And you call that ‘solving a problem’. When you are in a room and there is silence, you get nervous. You must fill the space with sounds. So you talk compulsorily, even before you know what you are going to say.
White people love to discuss. They don’t even allow the other person to finish a sentence. They always interrupt. For us Indians, this looks like bad manners or even stupidity. If you start talking, I’m not going to interrupt you. I will listen. Maybe I’ll stop listening if I don’t like what you are saying, but I won’t interrupt you.
When you finish speaking, I’ll make up my mind about what you said, but I will not tell you I don’t agree unless it is important. Otherwise, I’ll just keep quiet and I’ll go away. You have told me all I need to know. There is no more to be said. But this is not enough for the majority of white people.
People should regard their words as seeds. They should sow them, and then allow them to grow in silence. Our elders taught us that the earth is always talking to us, but we should keep silent in order to hear her.
There are many voices besides ours. Many voices…”
Deer Women and Elk Men: Lakota Narratives of Ella Deloria (1889-1971), educator, anthropologist, ethnographer, linguist and novelist of Yankton Lakota heritage.
Photo: c. 1910. An Apache man. EDWARD S. CURTIS/SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
Reyhan Toplu
Healing Your Inner Child
#healyourself#innerchildhealingmeditation
Enjoy and please let me know how this guided meditation makes you feel in the comments below!
If you'd like to support the channel please consider the YouTube "Thanksgiving" button (a new option under videos, next to the "thumbs up button ") or please consider using PayPal. Thank you! 👇
paypal.me/RToplu?locale.x=en_AU
Book l recommend ( My Bestselling Innerchild healing book) 👇
www.amazon.com/Battling-Inner-Child-Journey-Home-e…
CREDITS
*Recorded & and edited with love on my cell phone
*Music Lisence by Esistnichtsoernst, Angelic Choir
"Juan Sánchez - Tolworth" is under a Creative Commons (CC-BY 3.0) license
Music promoted by BreakingCopyright: bit.ly/bkc-tolworth
Kevin MacLeod , Atlantean Twilight, Creative Commons
*Video editing & Overlay photos from CANVA PRO
*Voice over by Reyhan(me)
*My Instagram :@theblisscouch (www.instagram.com/theblisscouch/)
*My Facebook @reyhantoplu (www.facebook.com/reyhantoplu)
#lousehay#innerchild#affirmations#healingmeditation#innerchildhealingmeditation #healingmeditation#magnetizeyourmind#Rey#subliminal#ıamaffirmations#releasingaffirmations#healingaffirmations#sleepmeditation
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
4 years ago (edited) | [YT] | 1
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Reyhan Toplu
https://youtu.be/033h4AvilPU
4 years ago | [YT] | 0
View 0 replies
Reyhan Toplu
“We Indians know about silence. We are not afraid of it. In fact, for us, silence is more powerful than words. Our elders were trained in the ways of silence, and they handed over this knowledge to us. Observe, listen, and then act, they would tell us. That was the manner of living.
With you, it is just the opposite. You learn by talking. You reward the children that talk the most at school. In your parties, you all try to talk at the same time. In your work, you are always having meetings in which everybody interrupts everybody and all talk five, ten or a hundred times. And you call that ‘solving a problem’. When you are in a room and there is silence, you get nervous. You must fill the space with sounds. So you talk compulsorily, even before you know what you are going to say.
White people love to discuss. They don’t even allow the other person to finish a sentence. They always interrupt. For us Indians, this looks like bad manners or even stupidity. If you start talking, I’m not going to interrupt you. I will listen. Maybe I’ll stop listening if I don’t like what you are saying, but I won’t interrupt you.
When you finish speaking, I’ll make up my mind about what you said, but I will not tell you I don’t agree unless it is important. Otherwise, I’ll just keep quiet and I’ll go away. You have told me all I need to know. There is no more to be said. But this is not enough for the majority of white people.
People should regard their words as seeds. They should sow them, and then allow them to grow in silence. Our elders taught us that the earth is always talking to us, but we should keep silent in order to hear her.
There are many voices besides ours. Many voices…”
Deer Women and Elk Men: Lakota Narratives of Ella Deloria (1889-1971), educator, anthropologist, ethnographer, linguist and novelist of Yankton Lakota heritage.
Photo: c. 1910. An Apache man. EDWARD S. CURTIS/SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
5 years ago (edited) | [YT] | 2
View 0 replies