Hello From Above Our Magnificent Planet Earth!

Laurel Clark

Laurel Clark

This is Space Shuttle Columbia astronaut Laurel Clark’s final words to her family that she sent via e-mail the day before she died in the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster:

“Hello from above our magnificent planet Earth. The perspective is truly awe-inspiring. This is a terrific mission and we are very busy doing science round the clock. Just getting a moment to type e-mail is precious so this will be short, and distributed to many who I know and love.

I have seen some incredible sights: lightning spreading over the Pacific, the Aurora Australis lighting up the entire visible horizon with the cityglow of Australia below, the crescent moon setting over the limb of the Earth, the vast plains of Africa and the dunes on Cape Horn, rivers breaking through tall mountain passes, the scars of humanity, the continuous line of life extending from North America, through Central America and into South America, a crescent moon setting over the limb of our blue planet. Mount Fuji looks life a small bump from up here, but it does stand out as a very distinct landmark.

Magically, the very first day we flew over Lake Michigan and I saw Wind Point (Wisconsin) clearly. Haven’t been so lucky since. Every orbit we go over a slightly different part of the Earth. Of course, much of the time I’m working back in Spacehab and don’t see any of it. Whenever I do get to look out, it is glorious. Even the stars have a special brightness.

I have seen my ‘friend’ Orion several times. Taking photos of the earth is a real challenge, but a steep learning curve. I think I have finally gotten some beautiful shots the last 2 days. Keeping my fingers crossed that they’re in sharp focus.
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Yoga Saved My Life!

Drum and bass pioneer Goldie is much more than a music producer and DJ. He’s a pioneer in sonic architecture, an actor, successful graffiti artist and entrepreneur. Many who listen to electronic music know Goldie is a legend, but few truly know why. In this BBC interview Goldie reveals that Yoga is a big reason for his success.

You may also like: How Yoga Helped Me Heal My Broken Heart

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Dear Abby – 1

Abigail Van Buren

Abigail Van Buren

This is from a selection of hilarious letters written to advice columnist going by the pen name Abby:

Dear Abby,
A couple of women moved in across the hall from me. One is a middle-aged gym teacher and the other is a social worker in her mid-twenties. These two women go everywhere together and I’ve never seen a man go into their apartment or come out. Do you think they could be Lebanese?

Dear Abby,
I have a man I never could trust. He cheats so much I’m not even sure this baby I’m carrying is his.

Dear Abby,
I am a twenty-three-year-old liberated woman who has been on the pill for two years. It’s getting expensive and I think my boyfriend should share half the cost, but I don’t know him well enough to discuss money with him.

Dear Abby,
I suspected that my husband had been fooling around, and when I confronted him with the evidence he denied everything and said it would never happen again.

Dear Abby,
Our son writes that he is taking Judo. Why would a boy who was raised in a good Christian home turn against his own?

Dear Abby,
I joined the Navy to see the world. I’ve seen it. Now how do I get out?

Dear Abby,
My forty-year-old son has been paying a psychiatrist $50 an hour every week for two-and-a-half years. He must be crazy.

Dear Abby,
I was married to Bill for three months and I didn’t know he drank until one night he came home sober.

Credit: Dear Abby is the name of the advice column founded in 1956 by Pauline Philips under the pen name “Abigail Van Buren” and carried on today by her daughter, Jeanne Phillips. Most of these are from the compendium “The Best Of Dear Abby“. More of these next week.

You may also like: The Fortune Teller

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Open Door To Solitude

Most of us are so engrossed in our outer lives that we have lost connection with our inner core. This inner core is the ever-present silent witness. It is found when we sit in silent meditation or we reconnect with nature as Ed Zevely does every summer when he rides out alone into the high country in the Rocky Mountains.

You may also like: Love, Glory, And Grace Everywhere!

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A Yogi On Death

Ramana Maharshi

Ramana Maharshi

We relate death with loss and seperation. But Yogi’s have a different take on death. Once you are further into your journey of yoga your view of love and attachment changes. Rather than love resulting in attachment, love becomes more open and flowing. The fear of loss and seperation is greatly reduced. Here is a story from the life of the sage Ramana Maharshi:

When the mail arrived, it brought a letter with news of the death of the first daughter-in-law of K. Lakshmana Sarma. This led Sri Ramana Maharshi to speak of ‘death’.

He said : “The dead are fortunate. It is only those who are left behind who feel miserable. It is our constant concern to bear the burden of this body and look after its needs. Day in, day out, this is our occupation — bathing, eating, massaging our legs, and so on — no end to it.

“When we die, it takes four persons to carry this body and yet we carry it about constantly without even stopping to think that we are doing so. We can easily lift a heavy stone under water, but as soon as we take it out we find how heavy it is, and in the same way, we don’t feel the weight of the body as long as a Chaitanya or Life-force permeates it.

“Deathlessness is our real nature, and we falsely ascribe it to the body, imagining that it will live for ever and losing sight of what is really immortal, simply because we identify ourselves with the body. It says in the Upanishads that the Jnani looks forward eagerly to the time when he can throw off the body, just as a labourer carrying a heavy load looks forward to reaching his destination and laying it down.”

Credit: This is from the book: “Day by Day with Bhagavan“, pp. 271–72, by A. Devaraja Mudaliar.

Related: The Story Of Ramana Maharshi: His Message.

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