The Nun Karma Repatterning

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Archive for the ‘KathieJoblin’ Category

Under-valuing our Creativity

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After intermittently working on this project for about 15 years, a wonderful poet and musician I know recently brought forth a new one-hour musical story for presentation in a church setting. It received its premiere performance to high acclaim, and was videotaped for posterity. The “starving artist” archetype appeared when the question arose as to pricing for the DVD of the production. The composer found himself inclined to “give away the store,” and sell the video for next to nothing, ignoring or forgetting the hours of work he had invested, and the expenses he had funded along the way.

 How many of us are short-changing our creative efforts?  Could this hark back to a time when someone important in our life failed to appreciate or even devalued what we had done? The Nun Karma Repatterning gives us a way to unplug from this disempowering energy, clear our old beliefs about the (limited or non-existent) value of our creative efforts and to feel OK with appreciating our creations and appropriately setting fees for services or prices for creative works.

Written by kathiejoblin

January 20, 2011 at 4:05 pm

Keeping what is Coherent from our Nun Karma

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 I’ve been pondering the way music reaches back and forth across the centuries. I’ve been thinking about how the kind of music that nuns and monks would have been familiar with has enjoyed a renewed interest in the last twenty or thirty years, although music as a discipline and as an art form has evolved considerably since the time of, for example, Gregorian chant. I believe that most of the music of that period was composed to be sung in praise of God – and would therefore be of a high level of coherence.

 Several years ago, I came across a recording which intrigued and fascinated me – and this was before the Nun Karma Repatterning was even a twinkle in someone’s eyes. The recording is called Vision — the Music of Hildegard von Bingen and is actually a collaboration between Hildegard of Bingen (a 12th century nun) and Richard Souther, a contemporary American musician and sound designer. Essentially the recording was made in stages – first the chants of Hildegard were recorded in women’s voices in chapel settings, and then Souther added instrumental tracks of a more contemporary style. The effect for the listener is quite engaging, even startling: the pure vocal clarity of the chant is backed up by rhythmic, harmonic and percussive effects that Hildegard could not have imagined.

 So what was it about Hildegard’s music that captured Richard Souther’s imagination so completely? My brother, who is somewhat of a classical music purist, regards this recording as a kind of bastardization of Hildegard’s music, but for me, the synthesis of the old and the new really attracts me – I love listening to this recording! In no way does this joint effort diminish Hildegard’s musical accomplishment. Rather, her genius, speaking down through the centuries through her poetry and music, has inspired a 20th century co-creation of a whole new work of art.

Written by kathiejoblin

November 21, 2010 at 8:48 pm

Group Repatterning Sessions Inspired by Self-Help Books

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Using a Self-help Book to Create a Repatterning

I have observed that many people read self-help books but are not able to implement their suggestions, despite their good intentions. Don Miguel Ruiz’s book The Four Agreements is a case in point. Here are the “four agreements” – four principles for coherent living:

1. Be impeccable with your word.

2. Don’t take anything personally.

3. Don’t make assumptions.

4. Always do your best.

Reading the book with pencil in hand, I jot down the ideas that the author puts forth as “I” statements – either problems (the negative aspect) or intentions (the positive aspect). I bring these to the group session in case people draw a blank when I ask them about any problems they have implementing these ideas. However, in a group of up to ten people, almost everyone has some experience where one of these agreements is problematical. Their sharing triggers others’ experiences, and soon everyone is contributing to the discussion. Needless to say, their input makes the session personal to them.

I have a basic structure in mind that I have drawn from the repatterning handbooks that involves checking for non-coherent brain waves, disharmonious notes, earlier experience factors, etc. I also check for non-coherent Chakra or Five Element factors. Then I ask the group what they want instead. We do a modality or two, and voila! The statements clear, and the patterns shift.

Doing sessions in this way also gives me opportunities to insert observations about coherence, resonance, and other aspects of the nine keys of Resonance Repatterning; thus it is a learning experience for the participants as well as a healing one.

Written by kathiejoblin

November 18, 2010 at 12:18 pm

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