Many
readers see this card as a romantic encounter, but because of what is
going on in my life right now, my focus is on the caduceus between these
two people. Today I choose to see it as a battle within myself that
needs to be reconciled. My inbox had this tongue-in-cheek (but timely)
message from tut.com this morning:
One
of the most stringent conditions all angels must meet, other than
double-advanced harp playing and skydiving abilities (not necessarily at
the same time), is that they must not allow themselves to feel hurt or
rejected by the choices made by others, no matter how much they've done
for them nor how great their love.
And
therein lies the difficulty - to learn to allow people to make their
own choices and their own mistakes without feeling guilt or resentment.
And not only that, but to love them in spite of it all.
From the Oracle of the Kabbalah today comes the letter "Pei:"
From the Oracle of the Kabbalah today comes the letter "Pei:"
Pei
means "mouth," and its form is said to be a mouth with teeth. In
explaining this letter, Rabbi Ginsburgh said, "Expression of wisdom
proceeds from the inner eye of the heart to the mouth." In other words,
if I want my speech to be creative rather than destructive, it needs to
come from a compassionate place. Robert Aitken, a Zen teacher and one
of the founders of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, wrote: "Noble, upright
speech arises from clear understanding that none of us will be here
very long and it behooves us to be kind to one another while we can."
Aitken was an activist who advocated social justice for gays, women and
native Hawaiians his entire life. He was a living example of speaking
out, but doing it "from the inner eye of the heart to the mouth."
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