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Julian Kaufmann

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Lightbulb To Enlightenment

September 20, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

Shine Your Light
Shine Your Light

Ideas are often depicted as a light bulb going off inside your head. When we have ideas, a new way of thinking or a new creation is turned on, and the world looks different as a result of the energetic transformation.

Enlightenment, according to Merriam-Webster, can be defined as, “a state of having knowledge or understanding.”

I woke up after experiencing a prolonged dark period in my life when I realized that I was not my thoughts and was able to reconnect with my higher power – God. Beyond the awareness and resulting transformation in me, I saw parallels between science and spirituality that I want to share with you.

A lightbulb works by allowing electrical energy to flow through it. We can vary the intensity of the light given off by changing the amount of electrical resistance in the lighting circuit.

Similarly, we are vessels of the Holy Spirit, and God’s energy flows through us. We can vary the amount of spiritual energy radiating from us by changing the amount of resistance we offer to life. The 4-Flowgates of Peace, Acceptance, Thankfulness, and Helping regulate the flow of the Divine through us.

Here is a brief video with more information:

https://vimeo.com/183245400

Please sign-up and join me in the next energy revolution and become a Prime Mover Today. My latest book, Let Go! Let It Flow a PATH to Peace and Personal Power is currently being edited and will be released soon, and I will be providing early members with free copies.

Let GO! LET IT FLOW

Namaste – from my light to yours!

Filed Under: Energy, Light, Uncategorized Tagged With: Enlightenment, Flow, Flowgates, Let Go Let It Flow, Lightbulb, Prime Mover

Metamorphosis through Metaphors

September 13, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

It's a Dog Eat Box of Chocolates World
It’s a Dog Eat Box of Chocolates World

Forrest Gump is one of my favorite movies. In one famous scene, Forrest is sitting on a park bench waiting for a bus and he shares his life story with those who join him on the bench.  He asks a lady who joins him on the bench if she would like a chocolate and then proceeds to tell her his life’s story while offering her that  “my mama always said life is like a box of chocolates,  you never know what you are going to get.”  Later in the movie Forrest’s mom,as she is dying, conveys these words as a metaphor to her son telling him, it is up to him to make the most of what he has been given in life.

Metaphors are figures of speech according to Merriam-Webster “in which a word or phrase literally denoting one kind of object or idea is used in place of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them (as in drowning in money).” Metaphors help us make sense of the world by providing a symbolic framework to explain ideas or concepts.

“If you want to change the world, you have to change the metaphor.” – Joesph Campbell

The metaphors we use to describe life can provide a tremendous amount of insight about our perceptions and perspectives.  How would you answer the following, “Life is a _______ (fill in the answer).”

When I was growing up I used to think of life as like a game.  I was very competitive and wanted to win at everything I tried.  The games I played as a kid were Monopoly and Risk, both of which are about conquering your opponents either through economic or military means.

As I entered the real world I can recall people espousing that it was a dog-eat-dog world where life was no longer a game but a real fight to the death. In this view, you needed to get your opponent quickly befoe they had an opportunity to get you.

Luckily for me, I woke up after being in the dark with a new idea of what life really was. A lightbulb went off in my head. Today I want to help us all shine brighter by using our God-given resources more effectively and efficiently.

Here is a brief video with more about metaphors and my own metamorphosis —

https://vimeo.com/182304429

Please let me know what your metaphor of your world is today and any past versions you would like to share.

“If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.” – Wayne Dyer

Namaste

p.s. – Please sign up and Become a Prime Mover today! It is free and you will receive valuable information and be part of the network that is helping take our power back.

 

 

Filed Under: Optimal Living, Uncategorized Tagged With: Forrest Gump, Joesph Campbell, Metamorphosis, Metaphors, Wayne Dyer

Enjoying The Fruits Of Your Labor

September 5, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

We need your part
We need your part

The first Monday in September is a legal holiday in the United States that recognizes and honors the contributions of labor – the work we do. After the industrialization of the US economy in the late eighteen hundreds and the rise of organized labor unions, the holiday came into being. This federally sanctioned day off honors the American worker and the contributions made to the prosperity of the country.

Today Labor Day also symbolizes the end of the summer season and many people use the extra time to go to the beach one more time and enjoy some time with family and or friends. Unfortunately, from my perspective, retailers use this time to offer various sales and promotions overtaking the actual meaning of the Holiday.

Everyone has been made for some particular work, and the desire for that work has been put in every heart. Rumi

To labor means to work, to toil and perhaps to struggle. The work we do, on the job or off the job, gives meaning and purpose to our lives. For each of us has been blessed with unique talents and gifts that we have been graced with. Part of our journey in life is to find meaning in the work we do and express these gifts to the best of our abilities. If we can still our minds and listen for divine guidance, we will follow our calling towards work that is meaningful and on purpose. The Bible says in 1 Corinthians 12:4-6:

There are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit distributes them. There are different kinds of service, but the same Lord. There are different kinds of working, but in all of them and in everyone it is the same God at work.

Making beautiful music together

A symphony orchestra is comprised of many different instruments with each contributing to the sound of the music, the work, it creates. We are musicians in the symphony of life, with each of us playing a unique instrument.

My favorite symphony is Beethoven’s 9th Symphony – Ode to Joy.  It is a massive collection of singers and a symphony orchestra and no matter how many times I hear it I am generally moved to the point of tears at some point in the piece. If you have not already heard it,  I strongly recommend you attend a live performance if you can. Beethoven’s 9th includes a triangle part ( approximately 1:03:00 into recording) which you can hear and see at the following:


Throughout the 9th symphony, the triangle player sits patiently waiting for his turn.  It is nearly an hour into the performance before you hear him. But his part is vital for the symphony, and he adds much to the piece through his contribution. We are all like that triangle player – we have an important contribution to make as part of the orchestra of life.

Bravo!

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Work Tagged With: Labor, Labor Day, Symphony, Work

What a $30,000 Flashlight Taught Me About Life

August 30, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

Shine Your Light
Shine Your Light

It’s back to school time; Fall is coming and football season is upon us. Meanwhile, my oldest daughter is entering into her final semester of college, and I am feeling a bit nostalgic. And truth be told, a little older now as well. It is hard to believe that 30-years have almost past since my senior year in college.

https://vimeo.com/180499771

I received an electrical engineering degree from Clemson University in 1987. Today it costs about $30,000 a year to attend Clemson, and it was worth all that and more to me. Clemson taught me so much about electricity and helped prepare me for so much in life by teaching me how to learn.

During my sophomore year, I took an introductory circuits class and we learned the most basic of all circuits – the flashlight. Flashlights are comprised of:
1) A power source – the batteries (V = volts)
2) Conductors – the metal material that conducts the electrical current from the power source to and from the filament (I = current)
3) The lamp or filament (the light bulb) (R = resistance)
4) A switch to start or stop the flow of electrical current

Today it would cost me over $30,000 to get to the point in college where I would learn about the flashlight. The following is a simplified circuit diagram of a flashlight:

thumb_IMG_1003_1024 Circuit

In addition to forming the foundation for understanding more complex, circuits, the flashlight also provided me a framework in which to explain God and the spiritual energy that animates life and the universe.

In a flashlight, the power source is typically a battery. A battery provides the voltage – the electromagnetic force that causes the electrons to flow through the circuit. In life, we have a higher power that is the source and force behind all there is. This higher power is God. Like the metal conductors in the flashlight, we conduct energy as well.  We are conductors of the flow of divine energy that emanate from God. Our light is more than a bulb, it is our soul’s expression of the divine expressing through us.

If you would like to learn more, please visit me at juliankaufmann and become a Prime Mover today. To join is free and you will receive access to my e-book – Why Less Is More – The Simple Science of How to Get More Energy Out of Your Life. A prime mover converts energy from one form into another and does work in the process. That is what we do! We take the energy of God and then convert this into our life’s work.

Shine Your Light

Namaste — from my light to yours!

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: electricity, Energy, God, Uncategorized Tagged With: Back to school, Clemson University, Flashlight, God, Light

Resting Power

August 23, 2016 By Julian Kaufmann

33242092_l2

Hot town, summer in the city
Back of my neck getting dirt and gritty
Summer in the City – Lovin’ Spoonful

Summer is here and the dog days are upon us.

During this heat wave, I’d like us to consider our home’s thermostats and how they might offer us some helpful energy saving techniques that can help us with our body’s energy as well. When things are at rest, they use way less energy than otherwise! Lately it has been too hot to move much anyway.

Recently I bought a Nest programmable thermostat for our townhouse. Actually, I got two – one for the upstairs unit and one for the downstairs. While at first, these thermostats seemed pricey, costing around $250 each. The more I learned about them and their capabilities, the more I am convinced of their value.

Programmable thermostats, like the Nest units I bought, work by regulating your HVAC’s run time based on a set schedule or other parameters. For example, you can set the thermostat to 74 degrees at night while you sleep and then it will automatically adjust to other temperatures throughout the day. This automatic schedule is very helpful since you don’t have to remember to adjust your thermostat’s set point throughout the day or worse just leave the unit running all day even when you are not home. Running your AC to over-cool an unoccupied house is wasteful and can be expensive.

The Nest is pretty sophisticated in learning your energy consumption patterns and reacting accordingly. Thanks to our smartphone technology the Nest will know when you are home or when you are away by syncing with your cell phone. For example, once I leave the house with my cell phone, the Nest senses this and the unit goes into the “Away” mode.

You maybe be saying yourself, “That’s great Julian, so what does it have to do with me?” I’ve got a programmable thermostat at home too.

Programmable thermostats help us conserve our energy by cycling the HVAC units to run periodically throughout the day – not constantly.

But what about our brains? How well do we regulate these energy hogs?

Energy conservation should be practiced in both our physical and spiritual homes.

Our brains are about 2% of our body mass yet they consume about 20% of our body’s energy requirements. If we can more efficiently utilize our brains we can improve the efficiency of our lives. The Brain Drain is real so be mindful of it!

Are you running your brain all day and then as a result feeling worn out by nighttime? Do you turn off your brain when you don’t need it and give it a chance to rest? Fortunately, the same energy saving principles of a programmable thermostat can be applied to how we run our brain.

Here are two helpful hacks to help give your brain a rest:

1. Pomodoro Technique (Tomato Timer)
Developed in the 1980’s by Francesco Cirillo, this technique breaks down the amount of time allocated to a task using a timer. Cirillo used a tomato timer when he was practiced and developed his technique and the Italian word for tomato is pomodoro. The basic idea behind the Pomodoro technique is that you work for a set period of time on one task, say for 25 minutes ( which is 1-pomodoro) and then take a 5-minute break where you don’t think about what you were just working on. You repeat this process for 4-times, (25 minutes of work followed by 5-minutes of rest). After 4 pomodoros are completed you take a longer 20-minute break.

Free timers may be found on-line like on-line pomodoro courtesy of Petr Nag.

I love this technique as it concentrates my mental effort to a maximum, short-burst while allowing me frequent breaks.  

2. Box Breathing

Meditation is another excellent way to cycle off your brain allowing it time to rest. I confess that I still struggle consistently meditating, with my typical session lasting between 7 and 11 minutes. I have tried a variety of meditation apps in my daily practice, but simply paying attention to my breath is key for me to begin to calm my mind and my physiology. The Box Breathing app  is my current favorite and an incredibly effective way to help me regulate my breath. I simply follow along with my iPhone App as it tells me when to breathe. The following picture gives you a brief tutorial on how to practice box breathing:

Slide1
Box Breathing – Prime Mover

Additional information may be found at Box Breathing app

Concentrate your brain’s power when you need it and then give it a rest when you don’t.

Until next time,  stay cool and let me know about your own settings and what works for programming your day .

Namaste

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Box Breathing, Nest, Pomodoro, Power, Rest, Resting, Thermostat

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