New Thought Families

Visit our pages on the 1st Mother's Day ~ & Nurturing Mothers!

Click the box to the left stop & start the song, Mother Is Another Name For Love
Mother Love, Mother Song!
Click here to hear Jeremiah's Mother Prayer
Joya & MotherSong * Kate & Threshold Choir *
Laurie & Jeremiah's Birth Song
* The Daffodil Principle

http://www.mothersong.org/
Joya Winwood has been doing her MotherSong in ongoing gatherings for twenty years and growing. They are multicultural sing-along music circles for families with zero to three year olds. Besides creating so many JOY vibrations at every one of her circles, Joya's purpose is to inspire people to find or start a song circle wherever they are. Take a minute to watch her circle video on the site: http://www.mothersong.org/ This is a must see to watch Spirit in action ... really! You can also purchase her CDs there;
Little Blessings
& Tender Souls. These are great for all ages for we are all tender souls who respond to Mother Song. Thank you amazing angel-Goddess Joya!!
Joya & MotherSong!

Human Angels Sing In Kate's Threshold Choirs! http://www.thresholdchoir.org/
It's truly a choir of human angels! Founded by Kate Munger, "The all-women Threshold Choirs honor the ancient tradition of singing at the bedsides of people who are struggling: some with living, some with dying. The voice, as the original human instrument, is a true and gracious vehicle for compassion and comfort." San Francisco Midnight Choir is a coed choral adventure that sings lullabies and songs of hope and spirit to the homeless on the streets of San Francisco. It is a separate group from the Threshold Choir and also led by Kate Munger. The amazing Kate Munger has been singing all her life. She was invloved in writing rounds and leading groups in singing rounds for 25 years.  She then began her Threshold Choirs that now have 12 Bay Area Chapters in CA as well as dozens of other locations providing a national and international presence. Visit their site to be inspired by their grace-filled service ... and maybe start a choir of your own?! Thank you Kate; you are truly an angel with skin on!

 

 

http://www.thresholdchoir.org/

When Jeremiah was in utero, Laurie wrote him song and sang it to him over and over. One night, the day before he was due, Jeremiah was stretching to get more room in his tight quarters and the water broke. While they had planned for a home birth, things did not progress as planned. It was 51 hours later that he was born c-section under the bright lights of the operating room. Laurie had her hands tied down and a sheet covered her view of the operation. Jeremiah came out with the cord wrapped around his neck and he was blue. They flashed a view of him to Laurie and whisked him across the operating room to suction him. From a very instinctive place, Laurie spontaneously sang his song as a way to touch him across the room. The effect was powerful for both of their souls and for the hospital staff who dubbed her "their first singing c-section"! Here are some lyrics from the song, "May you always feel like you can shine. May you always know who you are is just fine. You are created free and yet we're family so I vow to give you what's mine. I vow to give you my heart, my home and my time." And Laurie's favorite lines in the song are, "May your Spirit be nurtured, may you know you can fly. I vow to give you safe nest. I vow to give you the sky." Hear this song, Blessed Child!!



7 years after that birth song, Laurie & Jeremiah are singing about growth, struggle and flight in a new song, "My Mother Is A Butterfly" Listen to this 1st rough draft!
And check out the story of why butterflies have to struggle so when leaving the chrysalis. It's here. "To fly, we have to have resistance." -attributed to Maya Lin


One of those e mail "things" came to us through a blog that hails from Jaipur India - 302015
found at http://www.raamakants.com/

The Daffodil Principle!

Several times my daughter had telephoned to say, "Mother, you must come to see the daffodils before they are over. "I wanted to go, but it was a two-hour drive from Laguna to Lake Arrowhead "I will come next Tuesday", I promised a little reluctantly on her third call.

Next Tuesday dawned cold and rainy. Still, I had promised, and reluctantly I drove there. When I finally walked into Carolyn's house I was welcomed by the joyful sounds of happy children. I delightedly hugged and greeted my grandchildren.

"Forget the daffodils, Carolyn! The road is invisible in these clouds and fog, and there is nothing in the world except you and these children that I want to see badly enough to drive another inch!"

My daughter smiled calmly and said, "We drive in this all the time, Mother." "Well, you won't get me back on the road until it clears, and then I'm heading for home!" I assured her.

"But first we're going to see the daffodils. It's just a few blocks," Carolyn said. "I'll drive. I'm used to this."

"Carolyn," I said sternly, "Please turn around." "It's all right, Mother, I promise. You will never forgive yourself if you miss this experience."

After about twenty minutes, we turned onto a small gravel road and I saw a small church. On the far side of the church, I saw a hand lettered sign with an arrow that read, "Daffodil Garden." We got out of the car, each took a child's hand, and I follow wed Carolyn down the path. Then, as we turned a corner, I looked up and gasped. Before me lay the most glorious sight.



It looked as though someone had taken a great vat of gold and poured it over the mountain peak and its surrounding slopes. The flowers were planted in majestic, swirling patterns, great ribbons and swaths of deep orange, creamy white, lemon yellow, salmon pink, and saffron and butter yellow. Each different-colored variety was planted in large groups so that it swirled and flowed like its own river with its own unique hue. There were five acres of flowers.

"Who did this?" I asked Carolyn. "Just one woman," Carolyn answered. "She lives on the property. That's her home." Carolyn pointed to a well-kept A-frame house, small and modestly sitting in the midst of all that glory. We walked up to the house.

On the patio, we saw a poster. "Answers to the Questions I Know You Are Asking", was the headline. The first answer was a simple one. "50,000 bulbs," it read. The second answer was, "One at a time, by one woman. Two hands, two feet, and one brain." The third answer was, "Began in 1958."

For me, that moment was a life-changing experience.
I thought of this woman whom I had never met, who, more than forty years before, had begun, one bulb at time to bring her vision of beauty and joy to an obscure mountaintop. Planting one bulb at a time, year after year, this unknown woman had forever changed the world in which she lived. One day at a time, she had created something of extraordinary magnificence, beauty, and inspiration. The principle her daffodil garden taught us is one of the greatest principles of celebration.



That is, learning to move toward our goals and desires one step at a time--often just one baby-step at time--and learning to love the doing, learning to use the accumulation of time. When we multiply tiny pieces of time with small increments of daily effort, we too will find we can accomplish magnificent things. We can change the world .

"It makes me sad in a way," I admitted to Carolyn. "What might I have accomplished if I had thought of a wonderful goal thirty-five or forty years ago and had worked away at it 'one bulb at a time' through all those years? Just think what I might have been able to achieve!"

My daughter summed up the message of the day in her usual direct way.
"Start tomorrow", she said.


Love

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