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April 2026 Newsletter

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Why Intellectual Knowing Is Not Enough to Change Habits or Behaviors

by Bob Staretz

Chained down by old habits

Changing human behavior is one of the most complicated challenges in life, even when people fully understand that a new behavior is necessary, whether it’s something personal such as exercising more, communicating better, or managing stress differently, or more remote concerns such as the threat posed by the pollution of our oceans or nuclear weapons proliferation may have upon humanity's long-term survival. Most people struggle to act on that knowledge. The disconnect between intellectual understanding and actual change of behavior highlights the deeper psychological, emotional, social and cultural dimensions of human behavior. It is also one of the major reasons that humanity is facing several existential threats in our modern era.


Change is hard and our genes are wired by nature to resist it. For millennia, in our ancestor’s world things rarely ever changed and taking the time to come up with a new idea to fend off a Saber-toothed tiger could be deadly. In that case, habitual behavior, the need to determine nothing more than “flight or fight” served us well. This habitual behavior is no longer appropriate in the modern era where things around us are changing constantly and at a pace that is continually accelerating. Lack of adaptability to changing circumstances can lead to our demise just as much as the threat from a Saber-toothed tiger posed in our remote past. 

Read the full article

*** Announcing ***

Eagle's Eye Weekend Workshops

Navigating Transcendence

Are you suffering from physical or emotional distress? Do you sometimes wonder how your life fits into the larger scheme of things? Do you ever question the nature of the reality of which you are a part? Do you wish to understand or know more about the meaning and purpose of your life? If so, you may be open to experience a transcendent state of being that is often described as egoless, formless, boundless in space and time and infinite in awareness and knowing. Modern and ancient wisdom seekers, philosophers, sages, mystics, shamans and many others throughout all of human history have described these experiences and the benefits to be derived from them.

 

Experiencing non-ordinary states of consciousness is a royal road to changing consciousness. So is shamanism, as well as psychedelic and other transcendent experiences. If you have ever done a journey, you know it is a voyage into another level of understanding of self and the Universe. If you have never done one, consider gifting yourself a peek “behind the veil” of cultural assumptions and human programming. Humanity has never needed a shift in consciousness more than we do right now. We are birthing the future human, Homo Noeticus, the elevation of humanity to a loving oneness that will have the wisdom to solve all our self-made conundrums. Join us in sunny Florida for a journey out of your limitations.

Workshop reservations now open - click below for more information

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Transpersonal / non-ordinary experiences

Causes and Implications

Transcendence

Transpersonal or transcendent experiences are often described as mystical, "peak," “spiritual” or "awakening" experiences and rarely leave any person who experience them unchanged. While the experience itself may be brief, the "after-effects" can trigger a fundamental restructuring of a person’s perspective of their life and how they function in the world. Research in transpersonal psychology suggests that these shifts typically fall into four major categories that are discussed in the article. 

This article also discusses the three ways a transpersonal experience can be initiated: those that are sought (intentional practices), those that are triggered (spontaneous or external) like a change of perspective (seeing the earth from space), and those that are biological (related to trauma, near-death events or abductions).

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Staying Grounded, Resilient and Strong in Difficult Times

by Birgit Zacher Hanson

Birgot Zacher Hanson

We always have a choice how we respond.


Another day of waking up to the chaos in the world unfolding at rapid speed. And while I have not watched the news a lot, being in Spain right now adds a bit more urgency to wanting to know what’s going on.


And I noticed a big shift in me. I expected to feel the familiar anguish, anger, and anxiety that used to come over me during times of war and rising instability… But instead, I felt strong, resilient, and full of energy.

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On the Human Condition

By Eli Kolp and Gary Uremovich

On the Human Condition

Eli:  
Life is a dream for the wise, a game for the fool, a comedy for the rich, a tragedy for the poor.

Gary: 
Thank you, Eli, for such a short but startling conversation starter!  


I have to respond to what you said! I sense that life is a spiritual complicated journey of confusion, confession, and, finally, confirmation.

 
I appreciate how your saying reflects something true about the human condition, but it does not yet reach deeply enough. Life is more than dream, game, comedy, or tragedy. Life is a sacred pilgrimage.

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A Prayer in Spring

Robert Frost

1874-1963

springtime

Oh, give us pleasure in the flowers today;

And give us not to think so far away

As the uncertain harvest; keep us here

All simply in the springing of the year.

Oh, give us pleasure in the orchard white,

Like nothing else by day, like ghosts by night;

And make us happy in the happy bees,

The swarm dilating round the perfect trees.

And make us happy in the darting bird

That suddenly above the bees is heard,

The meteor that thrusts with needle bill,

And off a blossom in mid-air stands still.

For this is love and nothing else is love,

The which it is reserved for God above

To sanctify to what far ends He will,

But which it only needs that we fulfill.

April Soul Musings

by Douglas Bonar

ying-yang of life

The Tao of Cosmic Goodies: How to access and enjoy good stuff and times in life!

 
An early admission.  The title isn’t accurate as it primarily relates to the yin aspect, as I’ll clarify.  However, it really is catchy, don’t you think?!  And, I believe, pertinent.


Oh, and the subtitle isn’t really accurate either.  It would better read “How to access and enjoy good stuff and times in life while concurrently living in harmony with the earth and its inhabitants,” but that would be too long a subtitle.  So I shortened it.

 

 Anyway … 

Book Review

by the Groking Wholeness founders

"Consciousness Is All There Is"

Dr. Tony Nader is the author of "Consciousness is all there is". Dr. Nadler is a renowned Vedic scholar and neuroscientist, offers a direct path to peace for ourselves and our world that anyone can obtain—simply by delving into our own Consciousness. Dr. Nader provides the methods, tools, and guidance for connecting with our authentic inner nature and understanding how Consciousness is the essence of all existence. This book will help you open your eyes towards a new and profound understanding our consciousness and of life itself.

in his book Nadler describes how true wellness is a state of profound clarity, peace, and contentment, resulting from connection with our pure Consciousness. By enlivening our coherence between our Consciousness and the external world, we can find our happiest and highest states of ourselves.

Thoughts on Viewing Earth from Space

by Carol Roberts, MD

Earth from Space

With NASA's Artemis II launch to the moon, perhaps now is a good time to reflect on the view of earth from space. After spending 178 days aboard the International Space Station, astronaut Ron Garan returned to Earth carrying something far heavier than space equipment or mission data. He returned with a transformed understanding of humanity itself.


From orbit, Earth doesn’t look like a collection of countries, borders, or competing interests. It appears as a single, radiant blue sphere suspended in darkness. No lines divide continents. No flags mark territory. From 250 miles above the surface, every human conflict suddenly looks small — and every human connection looks unavoidable.

Garan described watching lightning storms crackle across entire continents, auroras rippling like living curtains over the poles, and city lights glowing softly against the planet’s night side. What struck him most wasn’t Earth’s power — it was its fragility. The atmosphere protecting all life appeared as a paper-thin blue halo, barely visible, yet responsible for everything that breathes, grows, and survives.

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