Sunday, November 8, 2009

Peace And Love In Your Life

All The People Want Peace in Their Life
Do you tend to feel uptight? Do you get upset or frustrated by certain turn of events? Are you generally stressed by things that happen? Do you tend to be reactive to outside events or people? Do you want to free yourself from being triggered by your emotional “baggage” and dramas? Would you rather be able to look calmly at events rather than being taken over by emotions or reactive patterns? Are you a therapist wanting to detach yourself emotionally from your client’s dramas? Are you mentally balanced and looking for more emotional freedom? Do you want to live in the NOW with less effort? If you have answered YES to any of these questions, then InnerPeace tips is for YOU!
You will also greatly benefit from this state if you had traumatic past experiences and want to break free from them. The process does not require you to relive or even think of those events. It is also greatly useful for meditation, self-awareness and mindfulness living. It is also especially recommended for all therapists to protect them for being emotionally triggered by their client's traumas and dramas.
This process has also been well tested with psychotherapy clients and so far this state has not caused any adverse reaction in them. As most therapy clients are in therapy due to mild or major post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), this state can eliminate most or all average therapy client’s daily pain and suffering in one session. Some people have been known to have lost suicidal feelings after acquiring this state or have had some dramatic reduction of tension in the body.

Yet, we agree little on what is peace. Perhaps the most popular (Western) view is as an absence of dissension, violence, or war, a meaning found in the New Testament and possibly an original meaning of the Greek word for peace, Irene. Pacifists have adopted this interpretation, for to them all violence is bad. This meaning is widely accepted among irenologists and students of international relations. It is the primary dictionary definition.

Peace, however, is also seen as concord, or harmony and tranquility. It is viewed as peace of mind or serenity, especially in the East. It is defined as a state of law or civil government, a state of justice or goodness, a balance or equilibrium of Powers.
Such meanings of peace function at different levels. Peace may be opposed to or an opposite of antagonistic conflict, violence, or war. It may refer to an internal state (of mind or of nations) or to external relations. Or it may be narrow in conception, referring to specific relations in a particular situation (like a peace treaty), or overarching, covering a whole society (as in a world peace). Peace may be a dichotomy (it exists or it does not) or continuous, passive or active, empirical or abstract, descriptive or normative, or positive or negative.

The problem is, of course, that peace derives its meaning and qualities within a theory or framework. Christian, Hindu, or Buddhist will see peace differently, as will pacifist or internationalist. Socialist, fascist, and libertarian have different perspectives, as do power or idealistic theorists of international relations. In this diversity of meanings, peace is no different from such concepts as justice, freedom, equality, power, conflict, class, and, indeed, any other concept.
All concepts are defined within a theory or cognitive framework--what I have called elsewhere a perspective. Through a perspective peace is endowed with meaning by being linked to other concepts within a particular perception of reality; and by its relationship to ideas or assumptions about violence, history, divine grace, justice. Peace is thereby locked into a descriptive or explanatory view of our reality and each other.
so by all this we can say that peace and love makes our life beautiful.

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