Emi Miller

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Emi Miller

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For more than forty years Emi Miller has dedicated her life to seeking wisdom from the world’s religious and spiritual traditions. During this time she has developed and led interfaith peace circles, meditation, sound and breath-work seminars, and healing prayer services throughout the United States.

She is a Licensed Acupuncturist, NCCAOM Certified, Asian Bodywork Therapist, and a traditional Naturopath. She is a Registered Nurse, a Certified Holistic Nurse, and an Interfaith, Stephen Minister. She has owned and managed an Integrative, Holistic Healthcare practice for twenty-five years. Miller has taught Integrative Holistic Health classes in universities, private and public schools and hospitals to nursing and medical students, as well as na
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Emi Miller One thing I do is to schedule a time every day as my writing time. If I am stuck, I re-read a piece that was previously written. Then several things o…moreOne thing I do is to schedule a time every day as my writing time. If I am stuck, I re-read a piece that was previously written. Then several things often happen: First, of course it is not 'perfect' and thus needs at least a tweak here and there. Yet while working on it often what is to come 'pops in', and then I can move ahead. So for me the best practice is having a scheduled time, and sitting down each day at that time. In that I follow the words of William Faulkner who said, “I only write when I am inspired. Fortunately I am inspired at 9 o'clock every morning.”(less)
Emi Miller I have had an online community for 18 years. Each day during this entire time I have posted and been privileged to share thoughts about life and natur…moreI have had an online community for 18 years. Each day during this entire time I have posted and been privileged to share thoughts about life and nature and love and life's difficulties and joys with thousands of people. Having this as a focus in my life has been wonderful. And having just completed my first book, In Wisdom's Light, A Message of Peace for All People is absolutely a dream come true! (less)
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In Wisdom's Light A Message...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2018 — 3 editions
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Until the Circle Waxes Whole



Until the Circle Waxes Whole


 
Humanity stands between the Divine and the manifest, and through the Human Spiritual Capacity, all planes of existence may be realized.


 
The destination of each Soul is to realize, while in individuated Human form, its Union with the Divine. This includes the complete awareness, and actualization, of our human Spiritual Capacity.


 
Ancient civilizations did not have detai Read more of this blog post »
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Published on September 16, 2019 11:45
In Wisdom's Light...
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Emi Miller liked a quote
The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley
“Even the most ordinary experience of a thing or event in time can never be fully or adequately described in words. The experience of seeing the sky or having neuralgia is incommunicable; the best we can do is to say 'blue' or 'pain,' in the hope that those who hear us may have had experiences similar to our own and so be able to supply their own version of the meaning. God, however, is not a thing or event in time, and the time-bound words which cannot do justice even to temporal matters are even more inadequate to the intrinsic nature and our own unitive experience of that which belongs to an incommensurably different order. To suppose that people can be saved by studying and giving assent to formulae is like supposing that one can get to Timbuctoo by poring over a map of Africa. Maps are symbols, and even the best of them are inaccurate and imperfect symbols. But to anyone who really wants to reach a given destination, a map is indispensably useful as indicating the direction in whi ...more Aldous Huxley
Emi Miller liked a quote
The Divine Within by Aldous Huxley
“BEING God is. That is the primordial fact. It is in order that we may discover this fact for ourselves, by direct experience, that we exist. The final end and purpose of every human being is the unitive knowledge of God’s being. What is the nature of God’s being? The invocation to the Lord’s Prayer gives us the answer. “Our Father which art in heaven.” God is, and is ours—immanent in each sentient being, the life of all lives, the spirit animating every soul. But this is not all. God is also the transcendent Creator and Law-Giver, the Father who loves and, because He loves, also educates His children. And finally, God is “in heaven.” That is to say, He possesses a mode of existence which is incommensurable and incompatible with the mode of existence possessed by human beings in their natural, unspiritualized condition. Because He is ours and immanent, God is very close to us. But because He is also in heaven, most of us are very far from God. The saint is one who is as close to God as ...more Aldous Huxley
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Albert Einstein
“A human being is a part of the whole called by us universe, a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feeling as something separated from the rest, a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.”
Albert Einstein

“SOYEN SHAKU, the first Zen teacher to come to America, said: “My heart burns like fire but my eyes are as cold as dead ashes.” He made the following rules which he practiced every day of his life. In the morning before dressing, light incense and meditate. Retire at a regular hour. Partake of food at regular intervals. Eat with moderation and never to the point of satisfaction. Receive a guest with the same attitude you have when alone. When alone, maintain the same attitude you have in receiving guests. Watch what you say, and whatever you say, practice it. When an opportunity comes do not let it pass by, yet always think twice before acting. Do not regret the past. Look to the future. Have the fearless attitude of a hero and the loving heart of a child. Upon retiring, sleep as if you had entered your last sleep. Upon awakening, leave your bed behind you instantly as if you had cast away a pair of old shoes.”
Paul Reps, Zen Flesh, Zen Bones: A Collection of Zen and Pre-Zen Writings

Amit Goswami
“Once we accept quantum nonlocality as an established physical aspect of the world in which we live, it becomes easier within science to conceive of a transcendent domain outside the manifest physical domain of space-time.”
Amit Goswami, The Self-Aware Universe

Amit Goswami
“There was once a Cossack who saw a rabbi walking through the town square nearly every day at about the same time. One day he asked curiously: “Where are you going, rabbi?” The rabbi answered: “I am not sure.” “You pass this way every day at this time. Surely, you know where you’re going.” When the rabbi insisted that he did not know, the Cossack became irritated, then suspicious, and finally took the rabbi to jail. Just as he was locking the cell, the rabbi faced him and said gently: “You see, I didn’t know.” Before the Cossack interrupted him, the rabbi knew where he was going, but afterward, he no longer knew. The interruption (we can call it a measurement) offered new possibilities. This is the message of quantum mechanics. The world is not determined by initial conditions, once and for all. Every event of measurement is potentially creative and may open new possibilities.”
Amit Goswami, The Self-Aware Universe

Aldous Huxley
“BEING God is. That is the primordial fact. It is in order that we may discover this fact for ourselves, by direct experience, that we exist. The final end and purpose of every human being is the unitive knowledge of God’s being. What is the nature of God’s being? The invocation to the Lord’s Prayer gives us the answer. “Our Father which art in heaven.” God is, and is ours—immanent in each sentient being, the life of all lives, the spirit animating every soul. But this is not all. God is also the transcendent Creator and Law-Giver, the Father who loves and, because He loves, also educates His children. And finally, God is “in heaven.” That is to say, He possesses a mode of existence which is incommensurable and incompatible with the mode of existence possessed by human beings in their natural, unspiritualized condition. Because He is ours and immanent, God is very close to us. But because He is also in heaven, most of us are very far from God. The saint is one who is as close to God as God is close to him. It is through prayer that men come to the unitive knowledge of God. But the life of prayer is also a life of mortification, of dying to self. It cannot be otherwise; for the more there is of self, the less there is of God. Our pride, our anxiety, our lusts for power and pleasure are God-eclipsing things. So too is that greedy attachment to certain creatures which passes too often for unselfishness and should be called, not altruism, but alter-egoism. And hardly less God-eclipsing is the seemingly self-sacrificing service which we give to any cause or ideal that falls short of the divine. Such service is always idolatry, and makes it impossible for us to worship God as we should, much less to know Him. God’s kingdom cannot come unless we begin by making our human kingdoms go. Not only the mad and obviously evil kingdoms, but also the respectable ones—the kingdoms of the scribes and pharisees, the good citizens and pillars of society, no less than the kingdoms of the publicans and sinners. God’s being cannot be known by us, if we choose to pay our attention and our allegiance to something else, however creditable that something else may seem in the eyes of the world.”
Aldous Huxley, The Divine Within: Selected Writings on Enlightenment

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