Who is Sanaya? Suzanne Giesemann answers:

Who is Sanaya? Suzanne Giesemann answers: "Sanaya (pronounced "sah-NIGH-ah") has told us that she is a collective consciousness of minds with both a feminine and masculine energy. This energy comes from a higher dimension than our own. When I bring through Sanaya's words, I am "tapping in" to Higher Consciousness. I am allowing that Consciousness to express itself through my body: through my brain, through my vocal cords, my arms, my hands, and also through my pen. Sanaya would not need a name, except for our human need to put labels on things and place our experiences into well-defined boxes. Sanaya takes us outside the box into a dimension where we come face to face with our higher selves. To hear the words of Sanaya as they come through ... to sit in the presence of that energy ... is a palpable experience of higher vibration ... of love. To read Sanaya's words can have the same result when you tune in to that finer energy as you read." (To read the full explanation of who and what Sanaya is along with transcripts of longer sessions click here.)

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Tune In


Music soothes the savage beast. So why do you listen to savage music?

Choose the tones you listen to wisely. They do affect your consciousness. The vibrations of each note can be harmful or healing, depending on the way in which they are arranged. How does the song make you feel? Energized or enervated? Peaceful and calm or crazed? You are not a slave to the radio. Turn it off or tune it to a tune that helps rejuvenate and energize you. Choose tunes for meditation that help to bring your energy into balance. How will you know if the tunes are doing so? How do you feel when you listen to them?

Get into the habit of listening to your body. It plays a non-stop tune with its vibration. Tune into that with awareness and you become the conductor of life instead of merely sitting in the bandstand.

1 comment:

  1. "At the end of his manuscript [Messiah] Handel wrote the letters "SDG"—Soli Deo Gloria, "To God alone the glory". This inscription, taken with the speed of composition, has encouraged belief in the apocryphal story that Handel wrote the music in a fervour of divine inspiration in which, as he wrote the "Hallelujah" chorus, "he saw all heaven before him".[Wikipedia -- These being alleged restatement of a servant's account, who had come upon the composer weeping in his hallway during a break from compositon]

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