In Corrogue this Anam Cara or Soul Friend is coming to his senses.

This morning it is a wet and Penawaran Sewa Menarik pada Rental Mobil Jogja windy Sunday morning. Each Sunday morning is an extended morning of rest. It is a morning of practice. I practice slowly coming to my senses. It is a morning in which I practice deep caring for the body and the soul. This is a practice of awareness of the sensationalism of life moment to moment. We are beings of the senses. We make sense of our world via the senses. The senses are gateways. They keep us locked into a certain reality but they can be the medium of freedom from the limitation we call “our life.

” For too long religion has labelled the senses as something “not quite nice.” For too long we have separated our senses as being something “not spiritual.” Many of our religions have done the same with the sensational experience we call sex. As an Aman Cara I teach spirituality of the senses. I teach what Van Morrison calls “A sense of wonder.” An Anam Cara teaches you to honour the sensuality and grace of the body. They teach you to honour this grace by letting go “disgrace that is inherent in our social conditioning.

Our nature is the nature of grace and not the illusion of disgrace. Our nature is the nature of beauty. Coming to our senses is what I call, “The feeling way.” Being attentive to the senses allows life to be felt as sensational. We tend to see that which is sensational as being outside ourselves. We gather more and more sensational images in our newspapers, on our televisions and from other media forms. We ourselves do not enter the sensational.

Thus we lock ourselves out of heaven. This heaven is this wonder called “life” in the eternal now. We do not enter the sensational realisation that we are the “flow of life.” We have become non-sensible people. We have become cerebral people. We try to “make sense.” We do not attune ourselves to being “able to sense.” This is not surprising. As children we felt sensational. We knew in ways we have forgotten. We knew what we liked and did not like.

We just did not have the words to explain. This was until we were told that trusting our senses was “not nice.” It could mean that you told the truth and God help us someone might then be offended. You might have known that Joe Bloggs was not safe to be around but you overrode this fact by being told that you were not “being nice.” Thus your sensational body and its wondrous intelligence were swapped for the experience of “niceness in all things.

” You took the first steps away from trusting your “inner telling sense.” For most of us the experience of trusting ourselves was downhill from there on in. An Anam Cara encourages you to return to the wisdom of the body and the senses. This is the whole body and not just from the neck up.