Sadhguru and Ram Charan on Innovation, Creativity, and Spirituality – INSIGHT The DNA of Success – Video


Sadhguru and Ram Charan on Innovation, Creativity, and Spirituality - INSIGHT The DNA of Success
Sadhguru looks at what spirituality means, and explains how it is different from a set of religious beliefs. He explains how spirituality is about working up...

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Sadhguru and Ram Charan on Innovation, Creativity, and Spirituality - INSIGHT The DNA of Success - Video

Psychic mediums to ‘take away mystery of spirituality’ at Cork event

TERESA COLLINS WORKS as a psychic medium in Cork, communicating daily with loved ones who are dearly missed by her clients.

But she knows not everyone will believe that first sentence.

Some people think it is crazy. And even some clients come with a challenging attitude, she tells TheJournal.ie. It is always important to give some evidence about the spirit. But it is also important that you bring a message through to validate that the person has not left them. Their spirit goes on.

Collins will be talking more about mediumship, spirituality and the supernatural at Cork Citys 13th annual World Ghost Convention later this month.

I will discuss the importance of mediumship, she continues. It serves a need for both the spirit and the human. Bereaved people feel abandoned but spiritualists believe the spirits go on forever. By bringing through a spirit to a loved one, there is proof that they go on.

She mentions a recent reading where she was able to give a message to a lady that her sister told her to get a hair cut. The client did not pass on the information about her sister being a hairdresser or that she expected her to say something about needing a trim.

Collins says she discovered her skill when she started having spontaneous experiences. Her grandmother appeared to her one night, despite the fact that she had died 10 years before she was born.

At funerals, I would see the spirit of the person if I was sitting next to the coffin, she adds.

Communication comes in many forms, she explains. It can be through how she feels when she meets a person, a sudden shift in temperature, the energy she feels from a spirit with no physical form.

If I meet a spirit who has passed away from lung cancer, I might find it hard to breathe, she notes. But the very big one is telepathy. You cant necessarily speak to the person but you can hear them in your mind and understand what they are saying to you.

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Psychic mediums to ‘take away mystery of spirituality’ at Cork event

Pink’s spirituality ‘blanket’

Pink says spirituality is like her "baby blanket".

The singer is known for her strong views and is never afraid to share them via Twitter.

Faith is a big part of her life, even if she doesn't belong to one particular religion.

"I'm a very spiritual person. It's the baby blanket of my life," she explained to British magazine Star.

"But I don't believe in organised religion. How can one group be right and everybody else wrong? We all bleed red, we're all trying to put one foot in front of another."

Pink, who is mom to two-year-old Willow, is stepping off stage and onto the big screen in Thanks for Sharing, where she plays Dede.

The part was based on her real life, which the 34-year-old finds amazing.

"I think it's a bit of magic," she smiled.

"I was extremely pregnant at the time and they brought me a cheesecake, so I said: 'Of course I'll do it.'"

Pink has had six albums and the same amount of tours, with her latest being The Truth About Love.

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Pink’s spirituality ‘blanket’

Giant unidentified objects (UFOs) near the Sun in the pictures NASA – Review for October 3, 2013 – Video


Giant unidentified objects (UFOs) near the Sun in the pictures NASA - Review for October 3, 2013
If you are in doubt about what they see - look at all the videos on this channel.If you can make a donation to help this channel - please email me: snezhinsk...

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Giant unidentified objects (UFOs) near the Sun in the pictures NASA - Review for October 3, 2013 - Video

NASA hopes 3-D printers will let astronauts make own parts in space

NASA

Martha Mendoza The Associated Press

Sep. 30, 2013 at 1:17 PM ET

Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP

Project manager Matthew Napoli, left, and director of research and development Michael Snyder test a 3-D printer that eventually will be used in space on Sept. 16 at Made in Space in Mountain View, Calif.

MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. NASA is preparing to launch a 3-D printer into space next year, a toaster-sized game changer that greatly reduces the need for astronauts to load up with every tool, spare part or supply they might ever need.

The printers would serve as a flying factory of infinite designs, creating objects by extruding layer upon layer of plastic from long strands coiled around large spools. Doctors use them to make replacement joints and artists use them to build exquisite jewelry.

In NASA labs, engineers are 3-D printing small satellites that could shoot out of the Space Station and transmit data to Earth, as well as replacement parts and rocket pieces that can survive extreme temperatures.

"Any time we realize we can 3-D print something in space, it's like Christmas," said inventor Andrew Filo, who is consulting with NASA on the project. "You can get rid of concepts like rationing, scarce or irreplaceable."

The spools of plastic could eventually replace racks of extra instruments and hardware, although the upcoming mission is just a demonstration printing job.

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NASA hopes 3-D printers will let astronauts make own parts in space

NASA's next Mars probe ready for Nov. launch, despite gov't slimdown

NASA's next Mars probe should get off the ground on time, no matter how long the government shutdown lasts.

The Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution orbiter, or Maven, got back on track for a Nov. 18 launch on Thursday (Oct. 3), just two days after the government shutdown froze liftoff preparations and put a scare into planetary scientists around the world.

"We have already restarted spacecraft processing at Kennedy Space Center, working toward being ready to launch on Nov. 18," Maven principal investigator Bruce Jakosky, of the University of Colorado, Boulder, wrote in a mission status update Thursday. "We will continue to work over the next couple of days to identify any changes in our schedule or plans that are necessary to stay on track." [How the Government Shutdown Will Influence Science and Health]

- Maven principal investigator Bruce Jakosky

The shutdown which went into effect at midnight EDT Tuesday, Oct. 1, when the Senate and House of Representatives failed to agree on an emergency spending bill forced NASA to furlough 97 percent of its employees and cease most of its operations, including work on missions such as Maven that have yet to leave the ground.

So the $650 million Maven mission went into a worrisome limbo in the home stretch of its long march toward launch. A lengthy shutdown could have caused Maven to miss its liftoff window, which officially runs through Dec. 7 (though the spacecraft could actually launch as late as Dec. 15 or so, Jakosky said).

That would be a big deal, because the next opportunity for Maven to get off the ground won't come until early 2016, when Earth and Mars are once again properly aligned.

But those concerns have now evaporated. NASA has determined that Maven qualifies for an emergency exception because of its importance as a communications link between Earth and robots on the Red Planet's surface, Jakosky wrote.

"Maven is required as a communications relay in order to be assured of continued communications with the Curiosity and Opportunity rovers," he said. "The rovers are presently supported by Mars Odyssey launched in 2001 and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter launched in 2005. Launching Maven in 2013 protects the existing assets that are at Mars today."

NASA has no Red Planet relay orbiters planned beyond Maven, he added.

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NASA's next Mars probe ready for Nov. launch, despite gov't slimdown