
Inner Peace: A bardo moment
Annie Katz: Wherever I had gone when I lost consciousness was a place of wisdom and truth, and the energy of that place was still with me when I came back to waking consciousness.
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Annie Katz: Wherever I had gone when I lost consciousness was a place of wisdom and truth, and the energy of that place was still with me when I came back to waking consciousness.

Peter Melton: That confusing time led to this experience of knowing herself in a brand new and glorious way, as a butterfly.

Moshe Ross: When someone has asked us for spiritual help, they aren’t coming for loaves and fishes, for physical solutions; they are seeking the Presence of God.

Jim Hatton: The mystics tell us that, in the nonphysical world, time does not exist…. Many even say that in the physical world there is only “the now.”

Charles “Al” Huth: We can expand our potential to build true knowledge by altering what we spend time focusing on in our daily lives. In short, search for the Truth.

Janai Mestrovich: Inner guidance insisted that not one thought of worry, fear, anxiety, doubt or anger could enter this healing process. And it didn’t. Too much was at stake.

Jim Hatton: “What people love and remember about a loved one is not what they did for a living or what religion they identified with or how much money they made. What they remember is the essence of the person when they were with them.”

Annie Katz: I’ve had a handful of what I think of as out-of-body experiences, and they have given me clues about what might lie beyond waking consciousness for me.

Annie Katz: I knew I was dying, but the odd thing was, I had an adult’s knowledge of death, as if I had a clear memory of dying and knew death was coming for me again.

Sally McKirgan: Then I wondered, what else is weightless and beautiful? How much does love weigh? Love is like the butterfly.
Barbara Shor: I first met Jane Goodall in 1987 at a lecture she gave at the Sacramento Zoo, where I was working as veterinarian as part of my residency program in non-domestic animal medicine at UC Davis.
Ashland, long celebrated for its Shakespearean drama, is about to trade soliloquies for sarcasm. From Dec. 5 to 7, the city will host the inaugural Ashland Sarcasm Festival (ASF!), a comedy takeover designed to fill theaters, bars and restaurants with sharp wit, satire and laughter.
Tickets are selling fast for “Mass for the Endangered,” described as a multi-sensory film experience of music and animated artwork being presented Sunday at the ScienceWorks Hands-On Museum in Ashland.
Ashland Scout Troop 112 will honor local veterans with a free Veterans Day breakfast on Tuesday, Nov. 11, from 7 to 11:30 a.m., or until food runs out, at Elks Lodge No. 944. Scouts will take orders, serve meals and visit with veterans as part of the local troop’s tradition of showing gratitude to those who served.
A proposal to improve safety along Lithia Park’s received a tepid response from the Ashland Parks & Recreation Commission on Wednesday, Nov. 5. Although commissioners supported adding disability parking near the Japanese Garden and created a designated pedestrian walkway, many questioned whether the cost would lead to meaningful safety improvements.
Medford voters appear to have approved a 2% increase to the city’s transient lodging tax, which will help partially pay for the construction of a downtown conference center and minor-league ballpark.

(It’s free)