Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Natasa Pantovic Nuit

Quote by Natasa Pantovic Nuit

“In an attempt to deeper explore the infinite game of Life, we explore: • Earth that is fixed, rigid, static and quiet, and symbolizes your world of senses; • Water that is the primordial Chaos, is fluidity and flexibility, and symbolizes your subconscious mind; Intuition is a deeper perception. Without clear evidence or proof, intuition perceives the subtle inner relationships and underlying processes creatively, and imaginatively. • Fire that is boundless and invisible, and is a parching heat that consumes all, or within its highest manifestation, becomes the expression of Divine Love. It is a symbol of your emotions, and • Air that has no shape and is incapable of any fixed form. It symbolizes your world of thoughts. It is a rational, systematic process, it is our intellectual comprehension of things. All elements are bound by: • Soul that stands at the center of the four elements as an Essence, an Observer, Consciousness coming forth to experience the magic of Life.”

Quote by Natasa Pantovic Nuit

Work

Mindful Being

Browse quotes and source details for this work. more

Author

Natasa Pantovic Nuit

Browse famous quotes and profile details for Natasa Pantovic Nuit. more

You May Also Like

“Mindfulness works with continuous awareness of body, breath; feelings, thoughts, intentions. Our state of mind, our positive or negative attitude towards the world, is closely related to our experiences of happiness or suffering. Mindfulness is awareness of everything that is happening in the moment of 'Now'. Mindfulness is a self development technique that will change the focus of our mind towards happiness. Mindfulness is continuous undisturbed awareness of the present moment. Fully aware of here, and now, we pay attention to what is happening right in front of us, we set aside our mental and emotional baggage. To be mindful we have to re-train our mind.”

“I see You, Every time I look into Buddha’s eyes. I give myself to You. Every time I alter one of Your 1,000s names. Honestly & fully I love You. Through Christ and Maria, Shiva and Shakti, Krishna and Radha, With every day that passes and every breath I take. I enter gratitude for receiving Your Love. Obeying Your Laws of Truthfulness and Ahimsa, Weaving Prana With hearts and souls of Gaia. Through mysticism, shamanism, sufism, and ecstatic meditations. I yearn to touch You, to feel You, to be You. Within this amazing Journey of Awareness of Your Consciousness.”

“We do food every single day! Conscious Eating is a big step toward Conscious Living. Quality and Quantity of Food is directly related to our Health and state of mind. We can use food to help us recover from Stress and Disease. Not taking food seriously will eventually lead to Stress or/and Disease.”

“Her name, said the Oracle, will this time be Ama, a female that sleeps in every one of us, Yin of Creation, a wisdom guide that with her purity extinguishes thirst for spiritual longings. She is the one that stands on a crescent moon with stars in her hair, pouring water from jars of her soul into lakes of emotions, awakening compassion for humankind and its Chaos, nourishing Earth and Her constant renewal.”

“« — Tu as entendu parler de Marcion, Martin ? Marcion était un chrétien qui vivait il y a mille huit cents ans à Rome. En regardant autour de lui, en regardant cet univers traversé de souffrances, de massacres, de maladies, de guerres et de violence, Marcion l’hérétique en conclut que le Dieu qui avait créé tout ça ne pouvait pas être bon, que le mal était une composante de sa création. Les scénaristes de la chrétienté trouvèrent un rebondissement assez vaseux pour répondre à la question du mal : ils inventèrent Lucifer. Mais la version de Marcion était bien meilleure : Dieu est responsable du mal comme de tout le reste, il est responsable de la maladie de Gustav aussi. Non seulement le mal fait partie de sa création, mais il en est un des leviers. C’est grâce à la violence et au conflit que la création évolue vers des formes toujours supérieures. Regarde Rome. Selon Plutarque, Jules César a pris plus de huit cents villes, soumis trois cents nations, fait un million de prisonniers et tué un autre million de ses ennemis. Rome était une société vicieuse, avec un goût certain pour la cruauté. Pourtant, son ascension a permis au monde d’évoluer[…] »”