Diane Meur Sunandini Banerjee Teresa Lavender Fagan
In Paris, Montreal, Seville, Berlin and towns large and small, Diane Meur has dreamt and she has remembered her dreams. In this small volume the author shares her dreams of the years 2008 10, a time of global upheaval that happened to coincide with upheavals in her own life. As she writes in the preface, They are not my life, they are not my writing, they are just the dreams I had, remembered, and noted down: all of them, and every part of them, without censure or omission. Some dreams are humorous: peeling a scorpion like a shrimp and finding it isn t half bad; some are poignant: a tiny...
In Paris, Montreal, Seville, Berlin and towns large and small, Diane Meur has dreamt and she has remembered her dreams. In this small volume the autho...
"That is full. This is full. From the full comes the full. Remove the full from the full and what remains? The full." This first line of the Isha Upanishad, one of the most powerful ancient books of faith, is so profound that Mahatma Gandhi famously said, If all the Upanishads and all the other scriptures happened all of a sudden to be reduced to ashes, and if only the first verse in the Isha Upanishad were left in the memory of the Hindus, Hinduism would live forever. One of the shortest collections of texts, consisting of seventeen or eighteen verses, the Isha Upanishad is significant...
"That is full. This is full. From the full comes the full. Remove the full from the full and what remains? The full." This first line of the Isha...