🌟 PMH ATWATER: How to Raise Your Consciousness to New Heights! | A Manual for Developing Humans

🌟 PMH ATWATER: How to Raise Your Consciousness to New Heights! | A Manual for Developing Humans

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18 Comments

  1. loved this! what a beautiful soul. We are truly blessed to have people such as PMH and Michael, spreading the word and helping us navigate through this much needed time. much appreciated!

  2. At 12:00: Learning involves motion. Young children are naturally active. They can't sit quietly in class. Mind and body should not be separated when learning. John Dewey commented on this in his "Democracy in Education":
    "For the pupil has a body, and brings it to school along with his mind. And the body is, of necessity, a wellspring of energy; it has to do something. But its activities, not being utilized in occupation with things which yield significant results, have to be frowned upon. They lead the pupil away from the lesson with which his 'mind' ought to be occupied; they are sources of mischief. The chief source of the 'problem of discipline' in schools is that the teacher has often to spend the larger part of the time in suppressing the bodily activities which take the mind away from its material. A premium is put on physical quietude, on silence, on rigid uniformity of posture and movement, upon a machine-like simulation of the attitudes of intelligent interest.
    "The nervous strain and fatigue which result with both teacher and pupil are a necessary consequence of the abnormality of the situation in which bodily activity is divorced from the perception of meaning… Physically active children become restless and unruly.

    "It may be seriously asserted that a chief cause for the remarkable achievements of Greek education was that it was never misled by false notions into an attempted separation of mind and body. With respect to the lessons which have to be learned by the application of mind, some bodily activities have to be used." Dewey refers to the necessary motions of the eyes, ears, hands, and vocal chords which "have to be trained to act as pipes for carrying knowledge back out of the mind into external action. For it happens that using the muscles repeatedly in the same way fixes in them an automatic tendency to repeat."

    My opinion: Children must be permitted to enjoy their childhood, by exploring and getting into things. Big mistake plopping 3 to 6 year-old's in classrooms, and expecting them to learn. Even worse is placing them in front of a computer. What is on the computer, and who is controlling the content?

  3. Yes, PMH Atwater is indeed a beautiful soul. But she's incorrect about the etymology of the word "Human," and it's certainly not derived from 'Om,' and I find no sources suggesting that they are cognate.
    Homo means 'man' in Latin, and has the corresponding adjective humanus, whence English 'human,' through French.

    Etymology: < Anglo-Norman humeigne (feminine), humane (feminine), Anglo-Norman and Middle French humain, humayn (French humain ) of or belonging to people (as opposed either to animals or to God) (1119 in Anglo-Norman), having human nature or characteristics (c1170), composed of people (c1174), benevolent (c1175), having people (as opposed to God) as its subject (1552 in letres humaines : compare humane letters n. at humane adj. Special uses) and its etymon classical Latin hūmānus of or belonging to people (as opposed either to animals or to divine beings), characteristic of people, civilized, cultured, cultivated, kindly, considerate, merciful, indulgent < the same base as homin- , homō homo n.1 + -ānus -an suffix, although the origin of the vocalism is unclear. Compare Old Occitan uman , Catalan humà (14th cent.), Spanish humano (c1200), Portuguese humano (13th cent.), Italian umano (13th cent.). With use as noun compare classical Latin hūmānus human being, hūmānum that which is human (uses as noun of masculine and neuter respectively of hūmānus , adjective), French humain human being (1340 in Middle French, usually in plural), human nature (a1630). Compare humane adj.

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  4. I gift you a new emerging word/concept free for you to enjoy have fun adding your definition for the word. Jeffree of the lovevolution

    Lovevolution Love – vo – lu – tion {luhv = vuh – loo – tuhn} a noun

    Your definitions: fill in the blank for this new word 1.________________

    Examples: 2. Unites science and spirituality philosophically into a holistic concept of purpose.

    3. The process in time of bringing together or gravitating energy or information, towards higher order and coherency and lower entropy creating ever more complexity via information feedback loop towards love. [see:Resonancescience.org]

    4. The light of light emerging developing as an expanding network of connected information of light into higher orders of consciousness and real love.